Pubdate: Tue, 15 Sep 2009 Source: Prince Albert Daily Herald (CN SN) Copyright: 2009 Prince Albert Daily Herald Contact: http://www.paherald.sk.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1918 Author: Tessa Holloway NORTHERN DRUG UNIT TO LAUNCH NEXT MONTH A new northern drug and gang enforcement unit will start work on Oct. 1, police and the provincial government announced Monday. The unit, proposed about a year ago, will be seven officers strong and focus on drug and gang activity, especially at the street level, from Prince Albert to the Northwest Territories border. City Police say the new unit should make it easier to follow criminal activity wherever it goes, recognizing that Prince Albert is a hub of drug and gang activity throughout the North and that gangs operate across the entire region. "Prince Albert certainly is a hub of community, of shopping and resources and activities for the people out of the North and they travel here. So for us to be just looking at Prince Albert without looking at it as a regional issue is kind of naive and not very effective," explained Insp. Kelly Stienwand of City Police. "We're looking at this as a regional issue now, and we think we're going to be much more effective." The new unit is needed now, he said, partly because the problem of gangs and drugs continue to get worse despite increasing arrests, and right now there is no regional strategy. "Our arrests are up two or three times what they were just a handful of years ago, so we know that more arrests aren't solving the problems," he said. "They are getting worse, but it's not a surprise. It's because of the demographics of our province, the youth demographics, there's more people in the ages likely to come in contact with the law." While everyone at the announcement Monday acknowledged that policing alone wouldn't solve the problem, Mercer Armstrong, the RCMP officer in charge of the project, said it could at least make people feel safer. "If we can have some effect in making it safer for (people), then obviously that's going to be a success factor for us," he said. "Our members are extremely busy and don't have the time to do a concentrated effort to deal with the street activity, so the team can go in and supplement them." The new unit will cost $750,000 in 2010, with an additional $380,000 being spent this year to get them off the ground. City Police are contributing three of four new positions to the unit, while four of the 16 new positions announced for the RCMP F Division this year will go to the unit. Minister of Corrections, Public Safety and Policing Yogi Huyghebaert said the new unit has been needed for a long time. "When I say it's (just) a start, I would like to see it probably be expanded in the future if resources are available," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake