View Full Version : Community Courts Gain Support


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October 14th, 2005, 04:21 AM
Community courts backed
Under new system, the public would help deal with street criminals

Canadian Press

Thursday, October 13, 2005

VANCOUVER - B.C.'s chief judges want to create a new community court that would get the public involved in punishing and rehabilitating chronic repeat offenders of property crime, many of whom suffer from drug addiction and mental health problems.

Chief Justice Donald Brenner of the B.C. Supreme Court and provincial court chief Judge Hugh Stansfield say the idea is the result of a major task force involving government, health professionals and the courts.

"We recognize that there is a growing problem with street crime, particularly within urban centres," Brenner told a news conference in Vancouver on Wednesday.

A relatively small number of chronic offenders are responsible for the majority of property crime, putting significant demand on the criminal justice system, Brenner said.

Stansfield visited Manhattan and Brooklyn in New York City, where community courts are taking credit for a drop in street crime.

He said they impose a broad range of responses -- everything from jail sentences to rehabilitation or a combination with an emphasis on repaying the community for harm done.

"The idea is that justice is swift. If someone pleads guilty to a drug crime, they are sent that day to be assessed for a rehab program.

"They don't leave the building, the service is in the same building as the court."

If offenders are sentenced to community service, it also starts that day and the assignment could be chosen by a board of local residents.

Stansfield and Brenner say the revolutionary approach won't work without funding from government for treatment programs.

The goal is to have a stand alone court operating by January 2007. The building would house a myriad of social services to deal with drug addicted mentally ill criminals.

Attorney-General Wally Oppal supports the idea and so does the premier.

"Really, it's the only rational thing as a community that we can do. We as a community have to get involved in all of this. I'm hopeful we'll carry on with the recommendation," Oppal told a news conference Wednesday.

He said it would be premature to say how much such an initiative would cost, or how much the government would be willing to contribute.

He said numbers might be available before the end of the year.

The idea for a community court came from the B.C. justice review committee, which has conducted extensive consultations and studies on street crime since March 2004.

The committee is specifically recommending a stronger relationship be forged between Vancouver Coastal Health and the justice system, recognizing most chronic repeat property criminals are drug addicted or mentally ill.

It also wants a stronger connection between the public and the criminal justice system. That could happen through the creation of a Community Justice Advisory Board and annual street crime plan.

Concerns that there is a lack of co-ordination among social service providers in downtown Vancouver have to be addressed, said the report.

It calls for an examination of what services are available and whether they're being efficiently used.

Brenner said the goal is to stop this group of drug-addicted, mentally-ill petty thieves from tying up the court system, a one-size fits all system that hasn't worked to rehabilitate them.

Treating them could require a massive investment in programs, the judges admitted.

The committee said addiction and mental illness are often contributing factors to street crime, and homeless contributes to visible disorder.

"There are over 9,000 injection drug users in the Vancouver area," the report said, "and over 11,000 mental health patients. Between 35 and 40 offenders with symptoms of mental illness appear in provincial court in Vancouver each day.

"Existing health and justice system responses are poorly coordinated, and as such, often ineffective. This is a source of frustration for the public, and also for the professionals who deal with the offenders."

Brenner said he hopes a community court that involves local residents and offers swift remedies would restore some public confidence in the justice system.
© The Vancouver Sun 2005

rt_0891
October 18th, 2005, 07:50 PM
NPA vows to halt 'spread of crime'
Existing council exposed the city to unsavoury elements, Sam Sullivan says

Jeff Lee
Vancouver Sun

October 18, 2005

VANCOUVER - Crime control, a community court system, and reining in the city's finances will be the top issues the Non-Partisan Association will focus on in this fall's civic election campaign, says NPA mayoral candidate Sam Sullivan.

In unveiling his party's platform Monday, Sullivan claimed the divisive city council of the last three years fractured public support and exposed the city to unsavoury elements, from chronic crime to poor fiscal planning.

"We must stop the spread of crime that now creeps into every neighbourhood," he said, complaining that the Coalition of Progressive Electors, which ruled council for the last three years, became so absorbed with its own infighting that it failed to properly look after civic issues.

Crime rose, council embarked on excessive spending, and some companies with headquarters here abandoned Vancouver, he said.

Sullivan said the NPA's platform is based on three broad plans to increase prosperity, safety and livability in the city.

But the seven-page party platform he released Monday did not give a lot of specifics.

Sullivan said that over the next month, the party will unveil more details about its platform.

Monday's announcement focused on what Sullivan said were the NPA's solutions to crime and ineffective courts.

An NPA council would appoint a "crime prevention and safety commissioner" responsible for all city crime-fighting initiatives, he said.

The platform also calls for council to "establish community courts to expedite the disposition of common street crime offences, streamline the judicial process and facilitate treatment . . . "

Such a program would help wrest control of the streets back from chronic offenders and unburden regular courts by diverting offenders into treatment and social service programs, Sullivan said.

But when questioned by reporters, Sullivan acknowledged that courts are under provincial and federal jurisdiction.

An NPA council would advocate for a community court system like one recently proposed by B.C.'s chief justices, he said. Such courts would complement the existing drug courts that try to divert offenders into rehabilitation and social service programs.

"It would deal with a broader array of people, not necessarily with drug addictions, [but] for instance if there are mental illness issues, and we think the habitual criminal is really a problem that has caused so many difficulties in our city," he said.

Sullivan said the city's departments also are not properly coordinating their responses to crime prevention, so the NPA wants a crime commissioner who would manage a new crime prevention and safe communities advocacy office.

"We think there hasn't been enough coordination and we're going to have that person in city hall bringing the various groups together," he said.

The NPA is the only civic party to nominate a full slate to council for the Nov. 19 election.

COPE and Vision Vancouver, made up of councillors who split from COPE after fractious infighting forced Mayor Larry Campbell and three councillors to set up another party, are putting forward five candidates each.

Both NPA and COPE are fielding full slates for park board and school board.

The press conference was decidedly low-key, lacking any of the glitz of previous NPA campaigns. It was held in one corner of the cavernous Fraserview Hall at Fraser and Southwest Marine Drive, above an East Indian supermarket. Apart from a smattering of media, about two dozen people turned out, half of them NPA candidates.

jefflee@png.canwest.com

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THE NPA'S PLANS

Safety -- Provide for a properly staffed police force and establish community courts to effectively treat root causes of street crime.

Prosperity --

Foster a climate of investor confidence and stability to ensure that all investment proposals are treated with fairness.

Livability -- Address the need for more efficient transportation, foster arts and culture, implement a cleaner city initiative.

Source: The NPA