Vancouver鈥檚 Downtown Eastside neighbourhood is in the grip of a 鈥渉umanitarian crisis鈥 of crime and violence that has reached a tipping point, Mayor Ken Sim said as he unveiled a taskforce to tackle organized crime.
Sim stood alongside Vancouver police Chief Adam Palmer to announce what the mayor called a 鈥渓ong-term, sustained effort to disrupt criminal networks, hold offenders accountable and make our streets safer.鈥
The city said Task Force Barrage will expand tactics that bring together police, fire, bylaw officers, sanitation crews and engineering teams to ensure sidewalks are clear and safe for residents, workers and visitors.
Sim said the status quo isn鈥檛 working in the neighbourhood, and criminal gangs, drug traffickers and repeat offenders are preying on the most vulnerable who live there.
鈥淔or years, hundreds of millions of dollars have been poured into the Downtown Eastside, a small, four-square-kilometre area, without delivering meaningful, lasting change,鈥 said Sim.
He said the task force represented a different approach.
Sim said the operation would cost $5 million, but it was 鈥渢he best investment鈥 the city could make and failing to spend the money would end up costing many times more.
Palmer said 38 officers would be deployed to get Task Force Barrage running, and Vancouver residents would immediately see more uniformed officers patrolling on foot in the Downtown Eastside.
He said there would be three core strategies: deploying officers on the streets, launching more complex investigations to target crime, and enhancing community partnerships to improve public safety.
鈥淭he primary function will be to target chronic offenders, to arrest people with outstanding warrants and people breaching their bail conditions, to drive out drug traffickers linked to street violence and organized crime who prey on the most vulnerable members of our community,鈥 said Palmer.
He said Downtown Eastside residents were 鈥渁t an exponentially higher risk to be the victim of violent crime.鈥
Palmer pointed to a measure called the crime severity index, which Statistics Canada says reflects crime levels weighted to their seriousness.
Palmer said Vancouver鈥檚 index in 2023 was 97, Canada-wide it was 80.5, while in the Downtown Eastside it was 524.
Sim said that the focus on crime 鈥渋sn鈥檛 just about public safety.鈥
鈥淭his is a humanitarian crisis, and the situation in the Downtown Eastside has reached a tipping point. Today we take the first step towards ending the cycle of violence,鈥 he said.
Sim said policing alone isn鈥檛 the answer, but it鈥檚 part of the solution and he鈥檚 urging other levels of government to help with the effort.
The mayor had unveiled a plan last month to revitalize the Downtown Eastside, which included a freeze on construction of new supportive housing units in Vancouver in favour of fixing the current aging housing units in the area.
Vancouver Coun. Pete Fry said he had lived in the Downtown Eastside for more than 30 years, and there were gaps in the mayor鈥檚 鈥渞eactive鈥 approach.
He pointed to the freeze on supportive housing and a failure to address 鈥渟ystemic health issues鈥 that more police would not solve.
鈥淲e know that there鈥檚 needs in the Downtown Eastside in addition to policing. I鈥檓 not criticizing necessarily a more law-enforcement approach. But where are the places for people to go?鈥
Calling some existing supportive housing 鈥渁bsolutely disgusting鈥 and 鈥渉orrendous,鈥 Sim said Thursday he would bring forward a council motion on the freeze at the end of the month.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an unsustainable situation and too many of our existing supportive housing are in shocking condition with broken elevators, garbage everywhere, open drug use, infestations and unsanitary living conditions,鈥 said Sim.
He added that the city doesn鈥檛 want people to rebuild their lives in crumbling environments.