Edmonton Journal

`We're desperate for help': Sohi set to meet Shandro

Mayor says he will ask for support to address the city's `human crisis'

- MADELINE SMITH

Mayor Amarjeet Sohi says he's bringing a list of the city's efforts on Downtown public safety and a plea for more help to his meeting with Justice Minister Tyler Shandro.

The mayor will sit down with the minister Tuesday afternoon, just a few days after Shandro invoked Alberta's Police Act and demanded a “public safety plan” from Edmonton city council to address what he called a “violent crime wave” in the city's core.

Sohi told reporters Monday that in addition to Shandro, he's set to meet with Community and Social Services Minister Jason Luan and mental health and addictions associate minister Mike Ellis.

“We're desperate for help. Our community is desperate for help,” Sohi said.

“We have been calling for interventi­ons from Day 1. And I'm glad that (the provincial government) started listening to us now. I look forward to the conversati­on that we will have with them.”

City council talked over plans and policies last week that have already been approved to help support core communitie­s — notably Chinatown, where two men in their 60s, Hung Trang and Ban Phuc Hoang, were killed earlier this month. A man is facing second-degree murder charges in relation to both deaths.

The Edmonton Police Service has also recently moved officers from other parts of the city to the core for more frequent, visible patrols.

Sohi said there's both immediate and long-term work underway to help Chinatown, from $300,000 in grants to help businesses fund private security to a five-year plan to work on decentrali­zing social services and shelters currently clustered together in Chinatown.

The city is also planning to advocate to the province to ensure people aren't discharged from hospital with nowhere to go, or released from provincial correction­s facilities without a place to live, which can lead to them being unhoused. Municipal leaders intend to push the federal government on the same issue, but with correction­al institutio­ns under their jurisdicti­on.

Hon Leong, the chair of the Chinatown Transforma­tion Collaborat­ive Society, said he's encouraged to see steps toward progress after years of being unheard.

“This gives us a lot of hope. We're talking about many levels of government that are now turning their attention to this problem that has existed for a while,” he said.

“And now we're hoping the community and the general public will show up and support some of this neglect — to not just look at Chinatown but to realize that there are communitie­s within Edmonton, period, that require attention and to be serviced to be safer communitie­s.”

The mayor noted he's attended two meetings with Chinatown community members in recent days.

“I hear that this tragedy has awakened us all to the realities that the people in Chinatown have been living for decades, in many cases losing business, losing customers and losing hope. Many people in the community have lost hope that things will change,” he said.

“And I commit to you that the things we can do as a municipali­ty, we will do those things.”

But the mayor said there are difficult issues to grapple with: notably, the way trauma is at the root of addictions and poverty that's leaving people on the streets.

“Once or twice a week I go for a walk in Chinatown. I see the pain, I see the suffering of those who are houseless, those who are facing mental-health challenges. I also see the impact on the community, on businesses,” he said.

“It's a human crisis we are facing. And it's not caused by one person, one organizati­on, one government. This is a collective damage that we have done as a society to Indigenous peoples and others, that they end up in those conditions.”

 ?? IAN KUCERAK ?? Mayor Amarjeet Sohi speaks outside City Hall Monday about the ongoing social issues facing the Chinatown neighbourh­ood. Sohi said the city is working on immediate and long-term strategies to help Chinatown and will ask the province for assistance to tackle the crisis.
IAN KUCERAK Mayor Amarjeet Sohi speaks outside City Hall Monday about the ongoing social issues facing the Chinatown neighbourh­ood. Sohi said the city is working on immediate and long-term strategies to help Chinatown and will ask the province for assistance to tackle the crisis.

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