Pubdate: Wed, 25 Nov 2009 Source: Prince George Free Press (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.pgfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2135 Author: Tom Fletcher ORDER IN THE STREETS Victoria - New measures to enforce order on the streets are moving through the B.C. legislature as the government gets ready to host the world and its news media at the 2010 Olympics. Housing and Social Development Minister Rich Coleman is the government's point man for two contentious bills being passed despite opposition objections. The Assistance to Shelter Act gives police new authority in extreme weather conditions to take people off the streets and bring them to the door of a shelter. Another law denies social assistance to people who have outstanding arrest warrants for indictable offences. Introducing the bill, Coleman noted there are exemptions for dependent children, pregnant women and "those who are in the final stages of life." NDP critics argued an "indictable offence" could be extended to even petty theft. "It does include the single mom who doesn't have any money, who goes out and shoplifts some groceries and gets caught," said Vancouver-Hastings MLA Shane Simpson in debate. B.C. courts decide whether each prosecution is by summary conviction, generally for minor offences or by indictment in more serious cases. Public Safety Minister Kash Heed said B.C. has the burden of criminals coming from other jurisdictions such as Ontario, which limits the distance it will pay to enforce an arrest warrant. Heed's study of 600 street-level drug dealers arrested while he commanded the Vancouver Police drug squad found many of them with outstanding warrants from out of province. "They bring their crime skills with them," Heed said. "More often than not, many of these individuals that have outstanding arrest warrants, that are actually collecting social assistance, are carrying on committing crimes here in British Columbia." Coleman has repeatedly denied the Assistance to Shelter Act is Olympic-related. He said it can only take effect when local committees declare an extreme weather emergency, which may not even take place in Vancouver during the Olympics. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake