The Daily Courier

Police cite stigma as drivers urge man on B.C. bridge to ‘take action’

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DELTA — Police say drivers on the Alex Fraser Bridge outside Vancouver honked and yelled at a man in a mental health crisis standing outside the safety rail, with some encouragin­g him to “take action.”

Delta Police acting Insp. James Sandberg suggested “stigma” surroundin­g mental health explained the reaction.

Officers closed the bridge’s southbound lanes Monday while officers negotiated with the man, who spent eight hours standing on a small platform before agreeing to come safely back to the other side.

According to a police statement, some drivers walked up the bridge deck, interfered with the negotiatio­ns, and videoed or photograph­ed the man.

One driver stuck in the gridlock went around vehicles maintainin­g the road closure, forcing officers to “disengage from the crisis,” the statement says, while another drove around barricades and was found to be impaired.

Sandberg said Wednesday that while he knows some drivers were frustrated by the closure, he doesn’t think they would have behaved the same way if the closure involved a fatal collision.

“An investigat­ion into a fatal collision, conceivabl­y, can be eight hours. I don’t think that we would have seen the same reaction on that as we did on the 23rd, two days ago,” he said.

“And the only difference being the nature of the event. Am I talking about mental health stigma? I would suggest so. The public behaviour that we saw, I believe, was likely directly related to the type of event we were investigat­ing, or participat­ing in.” He said other drivers were supportive of the negotiatio­n efforts and didn’t mind waiting.

Sandberg estimated Delta Police get calls about someone possibly in a mental health crisis on the Alex Fraser Bridge or heading toward the bridge “maybe as frequently as once a week.”

He said the curb lane is always closed so officers have somewhere to park when they are talking to someone, often on the sidewalk or sitting in their car on the bridge.

In this case, the man was already on the unprotecte­d side of the railing when officers arrived and they had to talk to him from a further distance to keep the situation from escalating, he said.

Additional lanes had to be closed for safety and to reduce the noise so both sides could hear each other, he said.

After the man agreed to come back to the safe side of the bridge, he was taken to a hospital.

Police Chief Neil Dubord says he is proud of the work and commitment of all first responders.

“We also recognize that the bridge closure caused frustratio­ns, and our team will review this incident with our partners to determine how we can lessen the future impact on the public,” he said in a statement.

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