Pubdate: Wed, 25 Feb 2009 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Katie Derosa Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?216 (CN Police) VICTORIA POLICE CHIEF LOOKS FOR TOUGH ENFORCEMENT Jamie Graham Presents Priorities After First Two Months On The Job After two months on the job, Victoria police Chief Jamie Graham wants to crack down on crime and homelessness in the downtown core, fix the problem-plagued CREST radio system, and push for police-force amalgamation, priorities he identified yesterday in an editorial board meeting with the Times Colonist. Graham wants tough enforcement on drug use and petty crime and will consider deploying more officers in Victoria's problem areas. "If you're smoking crack in front of an officer, you're going to be charged with an offence." Coming here from Vancouver, which has one of the worst homeless slums in the country, Graham admitted he was surprised at the number of homeless people in Victoria. Graham said he's been talking to the principal of St. Andrew's Elementary School, located at the corner of Vancouver Avenue and Pandora Street. Concerns have been raised about declining enrolment because parents are fed up with sign of homelessness and remnants of drug use littering the school grounds. "If that school closes, McDonald's will close and Speedy Muffler will close and it will be the beginning of a bad situation," he said of the business community within the immediate area. As Vancouver police chief, Graham headed a successful, but short-lived operation in the crime-ridden Downtown Eastside which flooded the area with officers for 40 days in an effort to make the streets safer. If things in Victoria's troubled areas get worse, Graham said he would consider similar tactics. Fixing the glitches in the faulty CREST emergency response radio system is also a top priority for the force, Graham said. "Cops want two things: They want a radio and they want it to work." Graham met with CREST representatives a week and a half ago and requested a technical report that will identify the problems with the radio network. He expects to get those findings by April. The spotty reception has forced officers to work in pairs, but Graham wants officers to go back to one-person patrol as soon as possible. "From a public safety perspective, the radios have to be fixed," Graham said. Graham also strongly supports amalgamating the region's police forces. He hopes discussion around amalgamation will be sparked following the provincial government's audit on the Victoria Police Department. People from outlying communities flock to the city during the day to work and at night to play and Victoria police are stuck with the cost, he said. There would be benefits for smaller communities, Graham said, such as administrative cost savings and access to police expertise that they currently contract out. Graham will also be lobbying to change the way in which criminals are charged, as B.C. is one of the few provinces that has to get Crown counsel approval for even minor offences. It is a process he says is cumbersome and a waste of resources. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom