T.O. boosts police night shift to curb guns
Two hundred officers will be added until 3 a.m.
Toronto plans to add 200 frontline officers to the night shift over the summer in an effort to reduce gun violence, the city’s police chief said Thursday.
Meanwhile, the mayor promised new funds for community programs to help at-risk youth.
The announcements from Police Chief Mark Saunders and Mayor John Tory come as the city grapples with a string of recent shootings, including several in busy areas.
Saunders said the additional officers who will be on the job between 7 p.m. and 3 a.m. will be sent to areas that need them — but he noted neighbourhoods will not be saturated with police.
“It’s about being focused and strategic in our deployment,” he said.
“This is not about turning communities upside down. That will never be the intention.”
As of Sunday, there were 212 shootings in the city this year, with 26 people killed, according to police. In 2017, there were 188 shootings resulting in 17 deaths by this time of the year.
The police force knows who the major players are when it comes to gangs, and officers will work with communities on “intelligence-led” efforts to combat gun crime, Saunders said.
The chief also noted that the policing approach will be different to similar officer increases in the past.
In 2006, more police were deployed to neighbourhoods that saw crime increases under the Toronto Anti-Violence Intervention Strategy (TAVIS), which was criticized for unnecessarily stopping people of colour.
That officer increase came after 359 people were shot, with 52 killed, by the end of 2005 — the year Toronto experienced the so-called “Summer of the Gun.”
“The difference between then versus now, it’s not just about the enforcement entity, it’s about the preventive pieces and the rehabilitation,” Saunders said. “You don’t police with one template and say this is what the entire city needs to do.”
The new officers will be in place by June 20, with the increased staffing lasting for an eight-week period, Saunders said. After that, police will reevaluate their needs, he said.
The staffing change is expected to cost up to $3 million, with the funds coming from the province.