Lethbridge Herald

Municipali­ties to address crime, homelessne­ss

- Al Beeber abeeber@lethbridge­herald.com

Representa­tives of Alberta’s mid-sized municipali­ties will be meeting at City Hall next week to discuss common issues with crime, homelessne­ss and other matters.

The purpose of the workshop is to discuss challenges faced by communitie­s in Alberta. The workshop, which is not open to the public, will be staged on May 2 from 4 until 7 p.m. in City Hall and will also be streamed online for communitie­s which couldn’t attend in person.

It will be held the day before the unrelated Alberta Associatio­n of Police Governance Conference & Annual General Meeting which is scheduled for May 3-4.

Councillor John MiddletonH­ope, who came up with the idea for the workshop and was directed by mayor Blaine Hyggen to engage other community leaders while he was deputy mayor, said after the meeting of the Downtown Lawlessnes­s Task Force on Thursday morning that it’s advantageo­us for municipali­ties to meet to discuss common issues.

British Columbia has 30 communitie­s currently working together on a similar type of approach and other initiative­s are being undertaken across the country, the councillor said.

He said it’s important for municipali­ties to advocate as a collective to various provincial ministries for assistance.

Curtis Zablocki, Assistant Deputy Minister for the public security division of the Ministry of Public Safety and Emergency Services, will be attending the workshop. Zablocki retired last year from his position as deputy commission­er of the RCMP in Alberta.

Middleton-Hope said the minister wants municipali­ties to work together on projects that address crime and disorder issues in their communitie­s.

“There is support from the government to do this, there is support from the municipali­ties,” he added.

Municipali­ties that were invited have more than 50,000 residents. They include Grand Prairie, Wood Buffalo, Spruce Grove, Sherwood Park, Aidrie, Red Deer and Medicine Hat. The total population of these communitie­s is about 700,000.

“This is municipall­y driven, this is not police driven, this is not police commission driven,” Middleton-Hope added.

“This is a municipal government initiative to try and get support on best practices, to try and get support on how do we move these initiative­s forward,” he added.

“These are opportunit­ies for other municipali­ties to learn from what we have done and we want to learn equally from them what they have done, what works, what doesn’t work so we don’t go down rabbit holes.”

At the task force meeting, Middleton-Hope said other municipali­ties across western Canada are forming committees, task forces and working groups to start analyzing problems they are having in their downtown cores.

In Alberta, 26 municipali­ties are constitute­d as mid-sized cities with population­s between 15,000 and 110,000.

“The purpose of this was to gain an understand­ing for the challenges that each of these of these communitie­s is facing and how they could be compared to what we were doing in Lethbridge, both in terms of identifyin­g the challenges that we were facing as well as the potential solutions that they may be implementi­ng in other venues,” Middleton-Hope said.

At the Alberta Municipali­ties conference in Edmonton, discussion­s with mayors suggested there was “sufficient synergy” that they wanted to come together to have more discussion­s and an opportunit­y to identify some of the challengin­g situations communitie­s are facing, he added.

Discussion­s will start by providing other municipali­ties an understand­ing of the Downtown Lawlessnes­s Reduction Task Force as well as the City’s encampment strategy that was implemente­d last summer.

He said the hope is that other municipali­ties will provide insights into what they are doing to combat their own issues.

“Every municipali­ty across the province, whether they’re small, mid-sized or large are experienci­ng to some degree a form of addictions problems, homelessne­ss problems, crime problems in their downtown core,” he said.

“One of the things that we’ve clearly identified is that resources that are being put into Calgary and Edmonton in particular have created displaceme­nt so we have had a substantia­l increase in drugrelate­d crimes in this particular reason, but not exclusivel­y to this region. Some of that has to do with pressures being put on Calgary and some of it has to do with our location. There’s a variety of different reasons why that’s happening but the reality is we want to have these discussion­s with these other municipali­ties to tell them that they’re not alone, that we are working on strategies to try and impact the problems in our neighbourh­oods and we want to hear from them what type of solutions they’re coming up with,” Middleton-Hope added.

 ?? HERALD PHOTO BY AL BEEBER ?? A meeting of mid-sized municipali­ties in Lethbridge on May 2 will be addressing issues such as homelessne­ss and other matters. The workshop is a municipal government initiative to get support on best practices and how to move initiative­s forward.
HERALD PHOTO BY AL BEEBER A meeting of mid-sized municipali­ties in Lethbridge on May 2 will be addressing issues such as homelessne­ss and other matters. The workshop is a municipal government initiative to get support on best practices and how to move initiative­s forward.

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