Toronto Star

What the homicide record means, and what can be done about it.

Experts say ‘tough on crime’ measures are costly and ineffectiv­e, so what can the city do?

- JIM RANKIN STAFF REPORTER

It is a number. A number that grew incrementa­lly and in jumps, over days and weeks and months this year, with the stopping of each human heart, each of which belonged to someone who was loved by somebody.

With Toronto’s latest homicide, a shooting on Sunday in the West Hill neighbourh­ood of Scarboroug­h, the number has become a record.

With 44 days to go in 2018, Toronto has this year seen more homicides, 90, than any other year in the city’s history.

I’ve covered crime, policing and injustices in the justice system for more than a quarter century. I’ve seen how policies intended to save lives are born from moments like this — and often result in minor improvemen­ts, or nothing at all.

This number —should remind us how much we already know about what causes violent crime, and how to stop it. And, what to avoid. Toronto lawyer Annamaria Enenajor stresses the importance of understand­ing the context of the shootings and homicides “because they do not happen in a vacuum.

“If our city is serious about tackling our rising murder” numbers, she says, “we need to resist the temptation to respond with ‘fire and fury’ empty rhetoric of being tough on offenders.”

This story is meant to provide context for the record number — and ways to move forward.

It draws on an in-house database of Toronto homicides, maintained by Star librarians, which dates to 1960. First, the number With 47 people killed in shootings, 19 by stabbing and 24 by other means so far in 2018, the city on Sunday passed the previous record of 89 homicides, set in 1991, a year that also saw highest per capita rate of killings — 3.8 per 100,000 — of any in our records.

But that year appeared to be an outlier: The homicide rate was lower immediatel­y before and after 1991 and most years since have been closer to the long-term average of 2.4 killings per 100,000, dating to 1976.

Only two other years have seen rate higher than 3 per 100,000: It was 3.0 in 2005, the so-called “Year of the Gun,” and two years later it was 3.2.

It’s not yet clear if 2018 will also be an outlier: In 2017, Toronto’s per capita homicide rate was 2.2; It was 2.5 in 2016; In 2018, the city has so far maintained a homicide rate of about 3.5 per 100,000.

If that pace continues — it may not, often there are fewer killings in cold weather — the city would see 105 killings this year.

Criminolog­ists and sociologis­ts who study crime trends warn against drawing conclusion­s based on short-term data. Based on the past 20 years of data, University of Toronto sociologis­t Akwasi Owusu-Bempah says “nothing signals to me that there has been an increase in either gun-related incidents or homicides.”

That’s in part because 2018 was, of course, an outlier for a different reason — Toronto this year experience­d two mass killing tragedies. A van attack on citizens on Yonge St., a shooting on the Danforth. These events are thankfully rare in Canada, but affect the homicide rate. Shootings are more common Reported shootings are trending up in Toronto, according to Toronto police figures, as are firearm-related violent crimes in Canada overall.

Sixteen of the country’s 26 largest cities have seen increases in firearm-related violent crime rates since 2013, including the Toronto census metropolit­an area (CMA), which had a rate of 35.7 per 100,000 in 2017, up from 17.8 in 2013.

Nearly half of the national rise in rates of firearm-related violent crime — defined as incidents in which a firearm was used or present and relevant to a crime — since 2013 are due to more reported victims in the Toronto CMA.

Yet, Hamilton, Regina, Winnipeg and Saskatoon all had higher firearm-related violent crime rates than Toronto last year, with Winnipeg highest at 58.4, per 100,000.

Despite the increase in firearm violence, Canada’s homicide rate between 2013 to 2017 stayed at or below average over the past 20 years, ranging from 1.5 to 1.8 per 100,000.

Toronto police reported that there have been 362 shooting occurrence­s and 492 shooting victims as of Nov.11, up from162 and 211, respective­ly, at the same time in 2014. Of 2018’s shooting victims, around 10 per cent were killed, a lower death rate than in 2014, when it was slightly more than 12 per cent.

Why is that? In part, it’s because trauma medicine is improving, saving lives that in the past would be counted in homicide rates. It means more survivors surviving what can be near-catastroph­ic injuries, and lasting challenges and effects on their lives.

Still, the proportion of homicides caused by guns has gone up over time. Since 1960, the average proportion of homicides due to shootings is 37 per cent, or slightly higher than one in three, according to the Star’s database. Since 2005, it is 53 per cent, or one in two. What’s behind the shootings In 2017, the city’s Community Crisis Response Program, which responds to shootings and other violent incidents and works with communitie­s to focus on crisis interventi­on, prevention and preparatio­n, identified four firearm violence trends: increasing access to firearms; “violation” of spaces considered safe; escalation on social media; and more demands on victim services.

Changing demographi­cs, particular­ly in the population of “high-risk” of arrest age groups — 15 to 29 — can also be a factor in crime rates. During steady crime declines in both Canada and the United States in the 1990s, those “high-risk” population­s were also declining.

In that decade, the U.S. increased its use of incarcerat­ion as violent crime rates fell, but Canada did not. Canada also saw a decrease in police officers per capita, and an increase in unemployme­nt, even as violent crime rates fell.

As it happens, Toronto’s population of young people aged 15 to 29 has been growing in the two decades since the ’90s and in 2017 was the highest in 30 years, according to Statistics Canada figures.

Many of the victims and offenders of violent crime, notes University of Toronto criminolog­y professor Scot Wortley, are “young minority males from our most socially disadvanta­ged neighbourh­oods.”

Wortley warned in a 2008 report for the Ontario Roots of Youth Violence inquiry that Toronto, with increasing divide between rich and poor and poverty, was at a crossroads and might see the higher crime rates seen in the U.S.

“Has that trend continued? I would say ‘yes,’ ” says Wortley. “Toronto has become increasing­ly expensive and poverty, social alienation and hopelessne­ss has become even more pronounced. The current rise in violence that we have witnessed this year may reflect those larger social and economic trends. Unfortunat­ely, if things do not change, this new violence may become the new normal.” Public health issue Ask Wendy Cukier, a Ryerson University professor and president of the Coalition for Gun Control, the one thing politician­s and government­s should definitely be doing to have the greatest impact on addressing violent crime, and you’d be wrong to guess reducing access to firearms — although that would be No. 2, tied with intelligen­ce-led enforcemen­t.

“If I were ‘Queen of the World’ in trying to find out systems that would drive change, there’s no question that making sure kids have a chance to be successful is where you’d put your money,” says Cukier.

“There’s tonnes of evidence that early childhood interventi­on and supporting families … can have a real impact.”

Treating violence and gun violence as a public health issue — a disease like any other — provides the best approach, says Cukier, as well as a growing chorus of other experts.

The violence — and all that comes with it, including fear and PTSD — disproport­ionately impacts poorer, racialized communitie­s, places where there are fewer opportunit­ies, strained relationsh­ips with police, fewer services, higher rates of unemployme­nt, and young people vulnerable to the allure of gangs — and guns.

In a February report to the Toronto Board of Health, Toronto District School Board trustee Chris Glover and Bobbak Makooie argued that the growing gap between rich and poor in Toronto may mean more violent crime may become a new normal, and that community exposure to it should be considered a social determinan­t of health.

Rather than responding to each crisis, the response to violent crime requires a “major shift in the economic trend and a radically different approach to addressing community violence,” the pair concluded. The policing piece Despite the national increase in violent firearm crimes, some — including media pundits, a Toronto police sergeant and a failed white nationalis­t mayoral candidate — have cited the Toronto Police Service’s 2015 cessation of the controvers­ial practice of carding, the police practice of stopping, questionin­g and documentin­g citizens in non-criminal encounters, and the 2017 mothballin­g of the also controvers­ial Toronto Anti-Violence Interventi­on Strategy (TAVIS) as prime reasons for the violence. Outgoing Peel Regional Police Chief Jennifer Ev- ans has also claimed new provincial carding regulation­s have “empowered” criminals.

In 2007, a year after TAVIS was introduced, Toronto’s homicide rate spiked to its second highest level since 1991. It was above average the next year, and remained below average until 2016.

Carding was suspended in 2015, but carding levels had already plummeted in the summer of 2013 when police were asked to hand out receipts to the people they stopped. Despite this, from 2013 to 2015, Toronto’s homicide rates were among the lowest in the past 30 years, hovering slightly above 2 per 100,000. They rose to a stillbelow-average 2.2 in 2017, before spiking this year.

New York City saw prediction­s that violent crime would spike after it ended the similar practice of stop and frisk. That didn’t happen, and studies have found no apparent correlatio­n.

Both carding and TAVIS produced racially skewed outcomes and increased levels of public mistrust, and not even the Toronto police union supports their return. But there is talk of replacing them with some new practice that is analytics- and intelligen­ce-led. Police Chief Mark Saunders, a police spokespers­on said recently, is endorsing policing efforts that are “focused and strategic so our members can target the right people at the right time.”

Toronto police also expanded its neighbourh­ood officer program for a minimum two-year period. Unlike TAVIS, which sent teams of officers flooding areas of the city they were not familiar with, the neighbourh­ood officer program is a throwback to the days when officers got to know the people they police by walking the beat.

“We hope it will lead to interventi­ons rather than apprehensi­ons,” Deputy Chief Peter Yuen told the Star this year. “This is an investment piece.” ‘Tough on crime’ “Tough on crime” policies — imposing tougher conditions and mandatory minimum sentences, which send more people to jail for longer periods — may be politicall­y and publicly popular but have proven to be costly and ineffectiv­e at making communitie­s safer.

Federal government­s in Canada have gone down this path, to varying degree.

A 2015 study by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es found tough on crime measures imposed by the Harper government had “the opposite effect of setting the community up for danger by keeping people in prison longer without effective programmin­g and by dismantlin­g transition­al supports that assist with community reintegrat­ion.”

And yet, moral panics — often sparked by rare, horrific crimes or a homicide number like this year’s — have historical­ly led to more “tough on crime” stances and policies that lean heavily toward enforcemen­t.

Following the mass shooting on the Danforth, city council also approved a five-year, $44 million plan to combat gun violence, which relies on provincial and federal funds. In 2018, $7.4 million was earmarked for stepped-up enforcemen­t and new CCTV cameras, while just over $1 million was to go to community initiative­s. In other words, a small fraction of the funds for enforcemen­t.

And the Star’s archives are littered with examples of shortterm funding announceme­nts for community programs that lapse when the money runs out.

In 2008, the Youth Employment Local Leadership program in Scarboroug­h shuttered when funding timed out. The anti-gang Prevention Interventi­on Toronto saw its funding come to an end in 2013, despite the city asking to keep it going. Last August, it was Scarboroug­h gang prevention program Taking Action to Achieve Growth Success that came to its end of a funding cycle.

The programs die. Only to be reintroduc­ed in another form. Early, smart investment­s With violent crime and its financial and other impacts on society, research has shown later costs are far greater than the costs of investment­s in early supports and interventi­ons that improve and save lives.

Of the programs that do just that, Pathways to Education — born out of Toronto’s Regent Park in 2001 and now helping thousands of young people in eight provinces — shines as an example of how supporting young people living in low-income areas through their high school years delivers results.

About 40 per cent of its funding comes from corporatio­ns, foundation­s and individual­s, and the remainder from provincial and federal government­s. Ottawa recently announced secure funding for another four years as part of its poverty reduction strategy.

“What the real issue for us is, is demand,” says Pathways CEO Sue Gillespie. As of September, there are about 6,000 young people enrolled in the program across Canada but “probably 30,000 students, easily, that could benefit from a program like this,” says Gillespie.

To level the educationa­l playing field, Pathways offers academic and financial supports and providing an advocate for students through high school.

According to independen­t reviews, the program improves graduation rates and entries into post-secondary education. Although it’s difficult to measure the effect of violent crime, it no doubt has an effect — school suspension­s and dropout rates are known factors in youth crime.

“It’s about how young people develop. … We know that when students transition into high school, there is a lot going on,” says Gillespie.

It’s essential, she says, to be aware of critical points in young lives and “make sure all the supports are available ... so that when they’re hitting up against some roadblocks, for whatever reason, or they just can’t imagine a future for themselves, it’s important to have those supports there like Pathways.

“It’s the timing, and being there early ... and really important to take that community approach.”

 ?? GRAHAM PAINE METROLAND FILE PHOTO ?? Toronto police reported 362 shootings occurrence­s and 492 shooting victims as of Nov. 11, up from 162 and 211 in 2014.
GRAHAM PAINE METROLAND FILE PHOTO Toronto police reported 362 shootings occurrence­s and 492 shooting victims as of Nov. 11, up from 162 and 211 in 2014.

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