The Prince George Citizen

Council’s two-pronged approach to crime

- Curtis Armstrong is the publisher of the Prince George Citizen.

Mayor’s committee and council’s proposed open house can’t change a broken system. Mayor Simon Yu has stricken a public committee, with three members from council including Brian Skakun, Trudy Klassen and Ron Polillo, as well as three to-be-invited community members whose experience lies in First Nation relations, as well as correction­s, with insight into what leads to repeat offenders.

The committee will take aim at the downtown core, including the light industrial area east of Queensway. While downtown crime may be an abstract to those up in College Heights, or in North Nechako, it’s a daily occurrence for us, whose office is at the end of Fourth Avenue, with our windows pointed directly at Moccasin Flats.

Meanwhile, a motion passed during the April 22 council meeting, introduced by Councilor Sampson and co-signed by Councilors Ramsey and Bennett proposes an open house on May 1, to hear the concerns of community members and stakeholde­rs, along with a $20,000 budget from council’s contingenc­y fund for a venue, AV equipment, a facilitato­r and advertisin­g.

According to Mayor Yu during the April 8 council meeting, “We spent 37.1 per cent of our $180 million capital expenditur­e budget on public safety (policing) and it’s almost unsustaina­ble.”

You don’t say? Spending nearly 40 per cent of our budget on policing is completely unsustaina­ble, especially when a system that is beyond our control processes offenders and sets them loose to keep on keeping on. Myriad examples exist where people are detained, with multiple alleged offences, only to be turned loose for months on end, while the RCMP “lab tests” their drug findings after traffic stops and/or warrant executions. Results from lab testing can take upwards of eight to 10 months.

In short, you get caught with enough fentanyl to kill every person within two square kilometers, you’re not even charged with anything for several months, once the police get lab results back. If you’re caught with other contraband, including guns, ammunition and body armour, the Crown doesn’t want to “unbundle” those potential charges, meaning the accused are back on the street, for months on end, awaiting lab results that can take eight to 10 months, on average.

This isn’t a critique of the police. They’re only processing offenders based upon case law, with the desired intention of prosecutio­n. Meanwhile, those awaiting trial are free to continue their poisonous, criminal enterprise­s.

We’re in the midst of trading the charter rights of offenders, often with prior conviction­s, for the safety and well-being of our communitie­s.

 ?? CITIZEN STAFF PHOTO ?? This is the view of Moccasin Flats from the top edge of the embankment along Upper Patricia Boulevard. The Citizen office is seen here to the right of the blue building.
CITIZEN STAFF PHOTO This is the view of Moccasin Flats from the top edge of the embankment along Upper Patricia Boulevard. The Citizen office is seen here to the right of the blue building.

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