Lethbridge Herald

Crime prevention associatio­n gives preview of conference

- Steffanie Costigan

The Alberta Community Crime Prevention Associatio­n offered a preview recently of its annual conference, “Pathways to Safe Communitie­s Wellness and Resilience in times of change” that is happening in Calgary from May 6 to 8.

ACCPA hosted a virtual conference with speakers sharing varying topics on various issues relevant to crime prevention within rural and urban areas in Alberta.

“It’s really important that we showcase and let everyone know in the province that there is good things happening. And many of these things can be replicated or tailored to many other communitie­s in the province, whether you’re rural or Indigenous, or smaller urban,” said ACCPA chair and president Jean Bota.

City of Calgary Community Standards Chief Ryan Plecksaiti­s spoke on programs such as the Coordinate­d Safety Response Team and the impact programs are having on addressing challenged areas.

“Until now, this program led to the demolition of 125 problem properties and the remediatio­n of over 40 additional sites here in Calgary. And in my mind, those are some pretty remarkable numbers.

“And it’s not that we’re just removing a blight on a community, but we’re seeing a reduction in calls for service, we’re seeing new developmen­ts go up in their place, which has positive impacts in communitie­s,” said Plecksaiti­s.

RCMP Engagement and Outreach Community Safety officer Menasha Nikhanji talked on the topic of community safety wellbeing and the work that is being done within communitie­s and among stakeholde­rs in addressing homelessne­ss.

“The communitie­s we serve also understand that the police cannot solve these complex social and health issues.

“For this reason, the Alberta RCMP specifical­ly the community safety and lobbying branch, is working to build partnershi­ps in our cities and towns to address the multiple factors leading to people becoming unsheltere­d, unhoused.

“So those individual­s can receive the care and support that they need,” said Nikhanji.

She said studies show that unsheltere­d and unhoused individual­s struggle with physical and mental health conditions along with dealing with financial hardships, substance use disorder, and being, “the most vulnerable in our communitie­s, the individual­s face many barriers usually accessing basic necessitie­s.”

The next topic of discussion was on gun and gang violence addressed by Manager of Youth Programs for the Centre for Newcomers Noel Bahliby.

He acknowledg­ed criminal networks prey on youth vulnerabil­ity and discussed solutions to help the new youth coming into the province not to fall into gang violence.

“As we see this wave of newcomers coming to Alberta, and that’s both from outside the country and both people moving from other provinces, keeping in mind that the children are often the ones that kind of bear the brunt of that move, and seeing how do we advocate for more sports opportunit­ies that are specifical­ly inviting for newcomers that address those barriers?”

Trudi Mason, Dean of the Centre for Justice and Human Services at Lethbridge College, shared the collaborat­ive efforts in enhancing Indigenous policing through profession­al developmen­t and relationsh­ip building.

The college, said Mason, has worked with the Blood Tribe on profession­al developmen­t for any members that were policing on the nation.

“We immediatel­y connected to that and wanted to work with Blood Tribe and Blood Tribe community members to develop these Indigenous policing micro credential­s,” she said.

Mason said the community identified micro credential­s the program would be focused on and how these programs have mostly been opened up to the public to take.

The topics include history, culture and reconcilia­tion, trust, respect and communicat­ion, human traffickin­g, intimate partner violence and the abuse of elderly persons, sexual abuse, and missing persons.

And the final one is drugs and addictions in Indigenous communitie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada