Pubdate: Thu, 14 May 2009 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 The Calgary Sun Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67 Author: Rick Bell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) CALGARY COPS HAVE CALLED IN THE CLEANUP CAVALRY TO BULLDOZE THE CRIMINAL SCRAP HEAPS THAT THREATEN THE DOWNTOWN CORE The busts continue. Three days and three nights. Could be 100 arrests of street-level scum by this morning. Maybe more, maybe less. And there could be another 100 or so in the days to come. It is a step in cleaning up the streets of the downtown before 62 beat cops put down their first welcome bootprints May 27. Deputy Chief Al Redford, who tells us he worked the core of this city when dinosaurs walked the Earth and Calgary contained fewer law-breaking parasites, says the sweeping up of street-level drug dealers and other dirtbags prepares the ground for our very own cavalry to move in and fight the good fight. "We intend to make the downtown area unpleasant for those who are making it unpleasant for others," says Redford. It is long overdue. For at least five years, as an ever greater caravan of criminals slithered their way here looking for an easy score, the call for help went out. Then it became a cry. Then a demand. Every city cop knew the situation on the streets was getting bad and turning worse. So did a few of those whose job is to cover the criminals and the crimes they commit. So did a few politicians and, in this case, the mayor was on the side of the angels. But precious little happened. That's a nice way of saying we endured not only the decay before our eyes, we had to put up with bucketfuls of bafflegab, bluster and buck-passing ballyhoo from the highest ranks of the police brass of the day. The cops who still believed wearing the uniform was a honourable vocation, dealing with the real threats to society the rest of us don't want to see and definitely don't ever want to meet, needed backup from those higher up the food chain. They didn't get it and we were served up PR swill explaining what couldn't be done instead of what should be tried. It bred a culture of defeatism, a sorry chapter now mercifully closed with the painful long goodbye and final exit of former chief Jack Beaton and the appointment of Rick Hanson, a Calgarian who loves this place and made his intentions clear from Day 1. Allow a brief memory of the trail we've travelled for those who arrived late and don't know how we got to where we are. Almost three years to the day, back in May 2006, Bronco and the former police chief met for 54 minutes behind closed doors, with the mayor insisting the ex-top cop make his day and put boots on the ground to enforce the law aggressively. What, all the pop sociology and head shrink turns of phrase didn't scare the bad guys away? Imagine that. Yesterday, two days and three years later, listening to the rollout of police plans, it is clear the page has turned. "There is a time to talk and a time to actually do stuff," says Hanson, pointing out those who feel Calgary won't go down the biggest sinkhole of all if things stand pat are "looking through rose-coloured glasses." "It's a different world out there." The No. 1 city lawman mentions how he wants people able to go out for some fun "and not have to be fearful somebody is going to walk in with his buddies and a bulge in his suit jacket that doesn't very much hide his gun because he doesn't want to hide it." "He wants you to see what a big man he is." Hanson speaks of getting addicts into a secure detox not yet paid for by the provincial Tories. He and his people vow to jump on lawbreakers who try and set up shop in other neighbourhoods by hitting the hot spots as they surface. And the police will keep arresting people breaking the law no doubt hoping the rest of the so-called justice system gets its act together or some of the vermin vamoose to an easier mark. It should be mentioned my crib is in beat cop area Bravo 150. A shout-out to Sgt. Bob McLeod and his uniforms. First coffee is on me. Yes, for those of us who cross swords and have the wounds to prove it, this day is truly a long time in coming. The chief knows the score. Hanson talks of those bygone days, starting up in the early '80s, what he calls "the smile-and-wave era" where police couldn't dare wrinkle anybody's shirt or even put the cuffs on a hoodlum. "Your job was to just wave to people and smile and apologize for doing your job as a police officer." The times they are a-changin' but utopia is not being offered nor even a return to a simpler Calgary. Cops see too much crap to deal with impossible replays or visions of paradise on this side of the pearly gates. "I hope nobody gets the idea there will be palm trees growing in downtown Calgary and we'll all be in flip-flops and Bermuda shorts as we walk down the street," says Hanson. "The reality is it's taken us years to get where we've got to. It's not like we're going to clean the streets up overnight." No, true enough, but every single arrest puts a little more dirt in the dustpan. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake