Pivot Legal Society calls for ban on DTES private security patrol
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Vancouver - Pivot is calling for
a ban on private security patrols in public space, and is asking the
City of Vancouver to revoke public funding to Business Improvement
Associations to pay for private security guards.
The
organization is calling for the $1.8 million spent annually by BIAs on
private security to be redirected instead into outreach and support
services for homeless people.
Pivot's new report "Security
before Justice" finds that the poorer you are, the more likely you are
to be interrogated, harassed or experience violence at the hands of
private security guards. The study, based on surveys and focus groups
with over 160 residents of the Downtown Eastside, revealed that
homeless people have more frequent and more problematic interactions
with security guards than people who are housed.
People on
income assistance or disability are also much more likely to be
targeted by private security. Downtown Eastside resident Gladys Radek
agrees: "They say that private security guards are here to help, but in
my case they just decided that looking poor made me suspicious and as a
result I was subjected to harassment."
The authors of the study
are calling on the City of Vancouver to cancel funding for the Downtown
Ambassador program, ban private security patrols on public property,
and re-direct the approximately $1.8 million of tax dollars currently
spent on private security into genuine homeless outreach services.
Public funding for private security amounts to nearly $100 a month per
homeless person, money that could be directed to rent supplements that
help people secure affordable housing.
"I would like to see my
business's tax dollars spent on a more proactive and helpful solution
to homelessness than private police" says Swami Lalitananda, owner of
Radha Yoga and Eatery on Main Street. "In a truly 'civil city', public
money would be spent to support people to improve their lives, not to
move them out of business areas."
Source: Pacific Free Press
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