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Crime, disorder take centre stage in B.C. election, but statistics tell complex story

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David Screech doesn’t mince words when asked about street disorder and crime around his business in downtown Victoria.

He described vehicle break-ins, people defecating on or near his store property, and someone pulling a knife on an employee in the store’s parking lot.

Screech, a former mayor of the Victoria-area community of View Royal, has worked at Greggs Furniture & Upholstery since 1981 and has owned the business since 2000.

But the iconic store is slated to close later this year, and Screech said deteriorating safety around the business was “the tipping point.”

“I think we would have hung in there for a little while longer if those issues hadn’t become so difficult in the last little while,” Screech said.

“One of the most frightening (things) is that we’ve had in the last 18 months fires set at our back door four or five times. And it’s only just by some divine intervention that the whole building hasn’t gone up.”

Business groups and others have raised concerns about crime and disorder ahead of the Oct. 19 provincial election, while police, including Vancouver Chief Const. Adam Palmer, have decried what he called a “revolving door” justice system for repeat and violent offenders.

The conversation has been punctuated by a series of violent events over the past year or so in B.C.

They include a triple stabbing at a street festival in Vancouver’s Chinatown, a swarming attack on paramedics in Victoria, and stabbings near the White Rock pier. On Sept. 4, one man was killed and another’s hand was cut off in a pair of gruesome attacks in downtown Vancouver — police say the suspect was on probation at the time and has had 60 previous interactions with officers.

How to improve public safety was one of 10 questions posed by a coalition of B.C. business groups to party leaders on Sept. 10, saying the violent crime rate had increased “by 30 per cent since 2018” with many businesses reporting higher levels of concern around employee and customer safety.

“Last week’s tragic situation highlighted where we are at and the need for all levels of government to come together,” said Greater Vancouver Board of Trade president Bridgitte Anderson, referring to the Sept. 4 attacks at a news conference announcing the group’s concerns.

“Simply, what we’re doing right now doesn’t work,” Anderson said.

Statistics Canada data show the overall per capita crime rate, based on police reports, is down in B.C. by about 3 per cent since 2018. The violent crime rate cited by business leaders is up by more than 32 per cent, having spiked sharply in 2019 and it has been mostly unchanged since then.

Vancouver and Victoria have both seen a 9 per cent rise in violent crime, per capita, since 2018.

Martin Andresen, professor at Simon Fraser University’s School of Criminology, said while many people — himself included — are seeing evidence of “in-your-face” public disorder, official statistics do not back up claims that crime and public disorder are worsening overall.

He noted that while there have been a number of high-profile crimes in B.C. in the past year, people should consider how these incidents are portrayed in the media and public discourse, and also look at hard numbers.

“I see it myself when I walk down the street,” Andresen said. “There are a lot more people out. … We seem to have a lot of people who are desperate, and there’s more panhandling everywhere I go. Violence appears to be, at least, a lot more in-your-face.

“It’s not out of control,” he said. “Can it go down? Of course it can. We’re still having these events, and they are negative events.”

Andresen said the Statistics Canada data shows most crimes in B.C. cities are down.

Notable categories where crime rates are up include uttering threats, property crimes, such as theft under $5,000, shoplifting, and mischief. But Andresen said rates of most other crime were “down or relatively steady.”

“Based on the data, in some cases, yes, there are things on the increase,” he said. “Also, maybe just the nature of some of these crimes have become more in-our-face than ever before.”

Downtown Victoria Business Association CEO Jeff Bray said he had heard the argument that statistics do not back up claims of rising crime and disorder in B.C., but that didn’t not mean it wasn’t happening.

“Part of it is businesses just don’t bother reporting,” said Bray, a former BC Liberal MLA who’s also president of the Business Improvement Areas of B.C.

Bray said he has heard from downtown businesses across B.C. that disorder was increasing in many communities outside the major centres of Vancouver and Victoria.

“As a society, we’ve kind of accepted some behaviours now that we would never have accepted 10 years ago,” Bray said. “As a result, we’re seeing behaviours get more aggressive, we’re seeing people become more brazen, and we’re seeing less of a response to these things.”

A recent survey conducted his group showed that 82 per cent of the roughly 500 business owners and operators asked “have increased fear and anxiety” due to crime and disorder in their neighbourhoods.

Both Bray and Screech said the situation around B.C.’s downtowns has deteriorated so severely that there was pressure for drastic steps.

“There are people in our community who are incapable of functioning without being a harm to themselves or others,” Bray said. “And so, involuntary care has to be, I think, part of the policy mix.

“We have people now with permanent brain injuries as a result of the toxic drug supply, … and all we’re offering right now is low-barrier supportive housing … where they continue to be able to use drugs, to be exploited by the criminal element. These things are not working.”

Before the election began, BC NDP Leader David Eby pledged his government would open facilities to provide involuntary care, specifically for those suffering from a combination of severe addictions, mental illness and brain injuries.

Crime and public safety have also been one of the B.C. Conservatives talking points, promising to increase funding to police, applying “zero tolerance” for violent repeat offenders and appointing judges that prioritize victims’ rights.

Andresen said such tough measures or boosting police resources are unlikely to yield results.

He said solutions need to be based on the opinions of health experts. Housing and support programs are the first key steps, Andresen said.

“Locking up people for longer isn’t going to solve the problem,” he said. “What’s being described in a lot of these policies is criminalizing poverty, criminalizing marginalized populations. And that’s not the solution to our problem.”

Screech disagreed.

“I think it’s a bipartisan issue, and I think what we’ve done in trying to be a caring, empathetic society and government, we’ve crossed the line … into facilitating a lifestyle. And I think all the parties have to look at that with a clear lens,” he said.

“We want to offer treatment and we want to help people, but we don’t want to facilitate a lifestyle that nobody is prepared to change.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 23, 2024.



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Presidents Cup: Canadians on International team have ties to Kent State University

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Herb Page was going about his business on a Tuesday morning when Mackenzie Hughes, one of his former star players on Kent State University’s men’s golf team, reached out to him on FaceTime.

Hughes said he just wanted to say hi because he was killing time at the kind of corporate function PGA Tour players are often invited to speak at. But just as Page bit on his story, Taylor Pendrith and Corey Conners leaned into the frame on Hughes’s phone.

All three were in the midst of a practice round at Royal Montreal Golf Club, scouting the course ahead of the Presidents Cup. The three Canadians, all Kent State grads, would be named captain’s selections to the International team a few hours later and they wanted to surprise their collegiate coach with the news.

“I just about cried,” said Page, adding that he had goosebumps from retelling the story. “They’re better people than they are golfers. I know that’s a kind of a catchphrase, but even after they graduated, they keep me in the loop. I’m still part of their little journey.”

Hughes was a year ahead of Pendrith and Conners on the Golden Flashes, but they all overlapped at the university in northeastern Ohio in the early 2010s. They all turned pro and are now three of the top Canadians on the PGA Tour.

Canadian golf legend Mike Weir made them three of his six captain’s picks on Sept. 3 for the Presidents Cup which starts this Thursday at Royal Montreal. Their inclusion on the International team’s roster is the first time three Canadians have played in the best-on-best match-play tournament, with Hughes from Dundas, Ont., Pendrith from Richmond Hill, Ont., and Conners from Listowel, Ont.

It was the morning of Weir’s announcement that Hughes played his small “prank” on Page.

“It just meant so much to me. I couldn’t have been happier,” said Page, who retired from coaching five years ago. “It’s just the way these three young men are, who they are and what they stand for. It was pretty cool.

“He got me so bad. I cannot believe how he did it. It was crazy.”

Hughes said that Page, who is from Markham, Ont., left an indelible mark on him, Pendrith and Conners and there was no way they wouldn’t tell him directly about being named to the Presidents Cup.

“My time at Kent State really helped shape the player I am,” said Hughes. ” (Page) was like a father figure to me at Kent State, someone that I really trusted and really respected his opinion.

“He’d be the first to tell you that there was lots of tough love, and some tough conversations that we had, and that’s what I think helps you grow and evolve as a person and a golfer.”

An argument could be made that the Kent State Golden Flashes of the early 2010s is one of the most well-rounded men’s golf teams in NCAA history.

Although other teams can claim more PGA Tour wins — the 1995 Stanford University team, for example, went on to win 86 titles on the PGA Tour, but 82 of them are thanks to Tiger Woods with Notah Begay III adding four — the Canadian trio at Kent State with American John Hahn has arguably been the most successful collectively with five wins between Hughes, Pendrith and Conners.

“It was a pretty stout team,” said Hughes, noting that Hahn went on to play on the European DP World Tour. “Now, at the time, I don’t think we quite had it all together and everyone clicking as a team.

“But you look back on it and individuals that were playing and what they’ve achieved it was a pretty awesome group.”

Page, who recruited and coached that team, is more effusive.

“That era was pretty darn good, Pretty darn good,” he said. “Of course, during that era, Alabama was making runs with Justin Thomas and Texas was making runs with Jordan Spieth.

“The thing about all three (Kent State golfers), they just got better and better and better. They weren’t superstars, nationally ranked, coming out of Ontario. I don’t want to say this in a bad way, but it’s not like I had to fend off tons of schools to get them to come to Kent State.”

Hughes has added Page to his VIP guest list at Royal Montreal Golf Club so that his old coach won’t miss a single swing by his former student-athletes when play begins on Thursday.

“I’m flying in Monday night because I’m going to be there the whole damn week,” said Page with a chuckle. “And I’m not flying out until Monday morning because when they raise that cup, I’m going to be there.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 23, 2024.



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Montreal’s Félix Auger-Aliassime to lead Canada into Davis Cup Final 8

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Montreal’s Félix Auger-Aliassime will lead the Canadian team into the Davis Cup Final 8, with Frank Dancevic returning as captain.

Auger-Aliassime will once again be joined by Denis Shapovalov, of Richmond Hill, Ont., Montreal’s Gabriel Diallo, Alexis Galarneau, of Laval, Que., and Vasek Pospisil of Vernon, B.C., in the event taking place, Nov. 19-24 in Malaga, Spain.

It’s the same squad that posted a 7-2 match record during the tournament’s group stage in Manchester, England, earlier this month.

Canada, which won the tournament in 2022, will meet three-time champion Germany in the quarterfinals in Spain.

Defending champion Italy will play Argentina, the United States will meet Australia and Spain will take on the Netherlands.

“This group has shown time and again that it can compete at the highest level,” Dancevic said. “It’s the same five players that brought home the Davis Cup trophy for the very first time in 2022 and enjoyed a great week in Manchester to seal our place in this year’s quarterfinals. So, we will head to Malaga knowing we have tough matches ahead of us, but with confidence that we can reach our goal.”

Auger-Aliassime, ranked 21st in the world by the ATP, will represent Canada for the eighth time in the Davis Cup, where he boasts a career record of 13 wins and 4 losses.

Shapovalov will make his 11th appearance in the Davis Cup, with a record of 18 wins and 10 losses.

Diallo, the youngest team member at 22, will participate in the Davis Cup for the seventh time, while Galarneau, 25, has been named to the Canadian team for the eighth time.

The 34-year-old Pospisil, the second most prolific Canadian in Davis Cup history, will represent the country for the 28th time, entering Malaga with a record of 32 wins and 27 losses in 34 career ties.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 23, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Hamilton Tiger-Cats sign veteran Peters to one-year contract extension

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HAMILTON – The Hamilton Tiger-Cats signed American cornerback Jamal Peters to a one-year contract extension Monday.

The deal keeps Peters with the CFL club through the 2025 season.

Peters, 27, has registered 38 tackles and four interceptions in 12 games this season, his first with Hamilton.

Peters signed with the Ticats as a free agent in February following three seasons with the Toronto Argonauts. Peters helped the Argos win a Grey Cup title in 2022.

Peters has appeared in 48 regular-season games over four CFL seasons, recording 155 tackles, 15 interceptions, two forced fumbles and one sack. He was a CFL all-star in 2022.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 23, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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