Pubdate: Wed, 22 Feb 2012
Source: North Shore News (CN BC)
Copyright: 2012 North Shore News
Contact:  http://www.nsnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311
Author: Jane Seyd, North Shore News 

OTTAWA SHOULD PAY ITS CRIME-FIGHTING COSTS

Mayor: Municipalities Can't Afford Tory Crime Agenda

The City of North Vancouver has a clear message for Ottawa where it
comes to rising police costs: If you're going to make the problem
worse, at least pay for it.

The city was among the communities putting in their two cents this
week with Berry Vrbanovic, the president of the Federal of Canadian
Municipalities, who was in the Lower Mainland to kick off a
cross-country consultation on policing issues.

"Policing is a significant portion of our budget," said city Mayor
Darrell Mussatto. "We want to make sure our voices are heard."

The rising cost of law enforcement - much of it paid by local
governments - is a key concern, said Vrbanovic, especially in light of
federal government crime legislation will likely swell the price further.

"Over the past decade, the costs of policing have doubled" - from $6.4
billion to over $12 billion nationally, said Vrbanovic, who met with
West Vancouver Police Chief Peter Lepine as part of his stop in the
Lower Mainland. "Two out of three police salaries in Canada are being
paid by municipal governments," he said.

Vrbanovic said that isn't sustainable. He said while parliament
debates crime legislation, federal politicians also need to consider
who will pay to enforce those laws.

Mussatto said federal decisions on issues ranging from the war on
drugs to fighting organized crime have huge cost implications for
local government. "They set the rules and they expect us to pay for
it," he said.

In the city and district of North Vancouver, RCMP costs are over $18
million annually - and rising.

The city's draft budget this year includes an additional $343,800 for
the RCMP contract. That covers increases in fuel costs, a request for
two new civilian positions and $75,000 towards integrated Lower
Mainland teams.

"They're busy building more jails," said Mussatto of the federal
government's anti-crime policies. "We get stuck with having to enforce
those regulations. We just don't have the resources to do that."

Mussatto said he has taken the same position as the four former
attorneys general of B.C. who called on the federal government in a
letter this week to decriminalize marijuana. The four said continued
marijuana prohibition has led to profits for organized crime and gang
violence.

"Is this a war that we should be fighting?" said Mussatto of the
so-called 'war on drugs.'

"Is this that much of a problem?"

Mussatto said if Ottawa wants to keep setting a crime-fighting agenda,
they should start paying for more of it. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.