Pubdate: Sun, 17 Apr 2016 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2016 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.theprovince.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Kim Bolan Page: 14 FIGHT AGAINST GANGS GETS $23M GOV'T BOOST The B.C. government will spend $23 million more for police, prosecutors and programs to combat the province's gang and gun problems. Premier Christy Clark announced the new funding in Surrey, where there have been 32 shootings so far this year, primarily over drug-trade turf wars. But she stressed that B.C.'s gang problem is not isolated to one community because gangsters are like "cockroaches" who move frequently to ply their illegal trade. "The frequency and public nature of recent gang shootings is unacceptable and demands this additional, strategic deployment of resources. People deserve to feel safe no matter where they live in B.C.," Clark said Friday. "This needs to be a provincewide initiative." The money is going to several programs: ■ B.C.'s anti-gang unit, the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, will create two new 10-person teams "to support police in communities around the province," Clark said. ■ Some money will go to an existing program that targets the most violent gangsters and their networks, no matter where they are in B.C. ■ Funds, which will be "flowing immediately," will pay for dedicated prosecutors to push cases against priority criminals, Clark said. ■ She said there would also be money for increasing the capacity for electronic monitoring of high-risk offenders when they're on bail or serving sentences in the community. ■ Crime Stoppers will get $450,000 in cash to offer rewards to those with information about gangs or guns. ■ Some of the money will be put into CFSEU's successful End Gang Life program, where officers do presentations to schools and community groups around B.C. ■ Funding will also be used to establish an Office of Crime Reduction and Gang Outreach, which will help gangsters wanting to change their lives. ■ The province is also creating an illegal firearms task force to study and strengthen provincial and federal programs related to illegal firearms. The news was welcomed by Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner and RCMP deputy commissioner Craig Callens, the top RCMP officer in B.C. Surrey-Newton NDP MLA Harry Bains was also pleased the government was finally investing in resources to fight the violence. But he said there wasn't enough focus in the announcement on prevention programs. "There are parents out there who are looking for support when they see their child is having some problems and may be moving in the wrong direction and they are not getting the support right now," he said. Bains said some of the money should be going to the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team, given that dozens of gang murders in recent years remain unsolved. His own nephew Arun Bains was gunned down in Surrey a year ago and the murder remains unsolved. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom