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Crime up significantly near new Nanaimo supportive housing complexes

RCMP hopeful situation has plateaued, setting up task force to focus on areas
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A police cruiser on Labieux Road. NEWS BULLETIN file photo

Police in Nanaimo are hopeful that crime in the areas around two new supportive housing projects has plateaued.

Nanaimo RCMP Supt. Cameron Miller said he thinks police can help to bring crime down in the Terminal Avenue and Labieux Road areas.

Miller noted that calls for service over the same four months in 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19 were 573, 660 and then 1,097 at Terminal Avenue and 217, 321 and 803 for Labieux Road. He said that represents a 66 per cent increase in calls to service in the Terminal area and 250 per cent increase in the Labieux area.

“There’s a very large increase which myself as a police chief and I think the community as a whole has a right to be concerned about,” Miller said.

RELATED: Nanaimo RCMP reports increase in calls around supportive housing sites

He said he’s “re-profiled” resources to dedicate to those areas. Nanaimo RCMP is working this month on an initiative “equivalent to an RCMP task force” that Miller said “will be extended as long as they need it … I’m going to take resources because this is an area that’s affecting the community as a whole and the reputation of the city itself.”

Police are reviewing files from the two locations and are working with partners such as supportive housing operators Island Crisis Care Society and Pacifica Housing, B.C. Housing, community advisory committees and Block Watch chapters.

The RCMP superintendent said with the new measures, and some problem tenants evicted from the supportive housing, crime stats could start going in the right direction.

“What we’re seeing right now is a plateau,” Miller said. “We’re not trending up; we’re not trending down.”

Nanaimo Coun. Ben Geselbracht said it appears that a lot of the increase in crime is drug-related.

“People are looking for money and why are they looking for money? To support lifestyle, and generally it’s a drug sort of thing,” Miller said.

RELATED: City says there’s an action plan around supportive housing concerns

RELATED: Nanaimo temporary supportive housing sites won’t be labelled nuisance properties

RELATED: Crime in Nanaimo leads to ‘explosion’ of interest in Block Watch



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About the Author: Greg Sakaki

I have been in the community newspaper business for two decades, all of those years with Black Press Media.
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