The Prince George Citizen

Crime rate rises

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The rate and severity of crime both ticked up in 2018, for a fourth year in a row, according to Statistics Canada.

The national statistics agency said Monday the overall crime rate was up two per cent over last year, with over two million incidents reported by police in 2018. That works out to a rate of 5,488 incidents per 100,000 people.

The severity of crime also rose by two per cent, according to a Statistics Canada calculatio­n called the crime-severity index.

But Statistics Canada noted both the rate and severity of crime were still substantia­lly lower than they were a decade ago, both down 17 per cent compared with 2008.

The crime rate in Canada peaked in 1991 and has been in dramatic decline since then, falling by more than 50 per cent until 2014. Since 2014, however, the rate is up just over eight per cent. Most of the movement in the crime rate is the result of changes in non-violent crime.

A spokespers­on for Statistics Canada stopped short of calling the increase since 2014 a “trend,” saying the agency prefers to wait five years to determine whether something is a pattern.

But Rebecca Kong did say “we’re definitely seeing a difference over the last few years” and noted that the overall year-to-year increases since 2014 have not always been driven by rises in the same crimes.

The increase in the severity of crime from 2017 to 2018 was largely because of higher rates of fraud, shopliftin­g, other thefts and sexual assault, according to the Statistics Canada report.

The class of sexual assault in question – incidents that did not involve weapons or evidence of bodily harm – was reported at a rate 15 per cent higher in 2018 than 2017. The increase was broad-based, with every province and territory except the Northwest Territorie­s reporting higher rates.

The crime-rate numbers published by Statistics Canada are based on data from Canadian police forces, so they do not include crimes that weren’t reported to police.

In an article accompanyi­ng the statistics, a Statistics Canada analyst said the rate of sexual assault reported is “likely an underestim­ation of the true extent of sexual assault in Canada.”

Irvin Waller, a criminolog­y professor at the University of Ottawa whose work focuses on crime prevention, noted another Statistics Canada survey showed somewhere between 83 and 95 per cent of sexual assaults are not reported to police.

When it comes to illustrati­ng the level of victimizat­ion itself, “I don’t think we should put too much store in the statistics ,” he said.

To actually reduce the number of cases, reported or otherwise, the focus should be on what’s happening in schools and universiti­es, Waller argued, and teaching young men to be less sexually violent. “These crimes are preventabl­e, but they’re not going to be prevented by what policing does,” he said.

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