Pubdate: Wed, 16 Feb 2011 Source: Merritt Herald (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Merritt Herald Contact: http://www.merrittherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1446 Author: Jade Swartzberg DRUGS, ALCOHOL CAUSE MAJORITY OF MERRITT CRIME Drug and alcohol abuse is considered the root cause for a majority of offences occurring in the City of Merritt, according to a Merritt RCMP Comparative Crime Trends report. Staff Sgt. Scott Tod presented the report, which compared crime statistics from 2010 to those from 2009, to the mayor and council during a regular council meeting Feb. 8. The report indicated an increase in Persons Offences, including 30 reports of assaults with a weapon compared with 23 in 2009, and 75 reports of common assaults compared with 43 in 2009. "The increase in Persons Offences is directly related to the high demand for drugs in our community," said Tod. Tod explained that due to the high demand for drugs, the community of Merritt has been identified as an attractive environment for Lower Mainland drug traffickers, which has led to more assaults. The report also indicated an increase in thefts, shoplifting and wilful damage also directly related to the high incidence of drug and alcohol abuse in the community. "Our biggest threat is the substance abuse -- alcohol and the demand for drugs," said Tod, adding that the demographics portrayed by the public about the people using drugs are not accurate since they are not necessarily the people on the streets. According to the RCMP presentation, though there is a lot of marijuana use in the community, the problem drug is crack cocaine. Merritt RCMP Const. Kelly Bartch who also spoke at the meeting about the connection between downtown crime reduction and Merritt's general investigation unit said though there is definitely a drug problem, Merritt is not the only community struggling. Both Bartch and Tod mentioned that the increase in recorded offences, including Public Intoxication, is directly related to the implementation of the Downtown Crime Reduction Position and increased enforcement in the downtown core. "The numbers look worse because we're targeting it," said Bartch, "but from our perspective, we're doing a better job." Mayor Susan Roline said she was not surprised to see the increase in light of what's been going on within the RCMP detachment. "We were told when we hired two more police positions that our numbers would go up not down, because now you have more officers answering the calls," said Roline. On the other hand, the report indicated a decrease in Break and Enter offences, which the RCMP attributes to the targeted enforcement of prolific offenders. Business Break and Enter reports went down to 29 in 2010 from 43 in 2009, and Residence Break and Enter reports went down to 45 from 53 in 2009. The report also indicated an increase in False Alarms, which places a strain on detachment resources, especially in the case of intrusion alarms requiring a multiple officer response, said Tod. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D