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78% of Vancouverites concerned about crime in the city: report

“We have been receiving many emails and hearing anecdotes from the field about people in Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­feeling unsafe."
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A new survey commissioned by Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­Police finds that locals are concerned that crime is rising sharply in the city. Photo: Person holds gun behind back / Getty Images

A new survey finds that the vast majority of Vancouverites are concerned about crime in the city, and over half of respondents say it has increased over the past year.  

In October, Leger – an independent market research and analytics company – conducted a survey on the perception of crime in Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­amongst people who live in, work in, or visit the city. The survey was commissioned by the Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­Police Department, to gauge how safe residents and business owners feel in Vancouver.

The vast majority of respondents (78 per cent)  are concerned about crime in the city, but that number rises to 84 per cent for people living downtown. For respondents who had been victims of crime in the past year, the number rose to 94 per cent.

“We review data and analytics on a daily basis to see how crime is trending, and where neighbourhood hot spots are. We use this information to determine police operations and to allocate resourcing,” says Howard Chow, Deputy Chief Constable, Operations, VPD. “However, what we don’t get consistently is a sense of how individuals, families, and business owners feel on a day-to-day basis about neighbourhood safety. This survey gives us that view.”

Sixty-one per cent of respondents say crime has gotten worse over the past year, while 29 per cent say it is the same; only four per cent of respondents feel it is better. However, 74 per cent of the respondents living downtown indicated that crime has gotten worse.

“We have been receiving many emails and hearing anecdotes from the field about people in Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­feeling unsafe. This survey gives us additional insight to deploy the appropriate resourcing to help create a sense of safety in the city,” adds Chow. “We need to continue to ensure we are effective and efficient in resourcing and deploying the right people, in the right places, at the right time.”

Top neighbourhoods for crime

Over one-third of respondents report changing their routines or behaviour – like where they walk or when they walk – because of crime concerns. The most frequently mentioned behaviour change was avoiding specific neighbourhoods. The top four neighbourhoods mentioned were the Downtown Eastside, Chinatown, Gastown, and the Granville Entertainment District.  

Fifty-eight per cent of respondents say they are concerned about crime in the neighbourhood they reside in, but less than half (46 per cent) say it has gotten worse over the past year; 45 per cent of respondents say it is the same. 

For people who work in the city, 53 per cent are concerned about crime in their neighbourhood, and 40 per cent say crime has increased over the past year.

For business owners, 55 per cent of respondents say their staff have expressed concern about crime in the neighbourhood. 

In response, the VPD has started a neighbourhood response team. Officers and community safety personnel were redeployed, starting on Nov. 2, from other duties to the new team. Their primary responsibility is to respond quickly to street disorder issues before they escalate. Officers are responsible for responding to calls from the public about disturbances, suspicious circumstances, people trespassing, and mischief.

In regard to the Strathcona Park encampment, Chow tells reporters in a police conference that officers have seen an increase in crimes related to "weapons, assaults, and street disorder issues" and that the neighbourhood response team will address these issues.

Chow notes that the response team will also be more responsive to lower-priority, street disorder calls such as, "the person that's using drugs in the parking lots, the person that may be sleeping in your doorway and you can't get in or out of your building, like the person that may be chasing away people from your business."  

 “We know from experience that calls that may seem like low-level crime can be indicative of larger, criminal issues,” adds Chow. “We want the public to call these in, because having police respond and deal with the issue, can increase the sense of safety on our streets.”

There were 755 respondents of the survey, of which 48 per cent live in Vancouver, 28 per cent live and work in Vancouver, 13 per cent work or conduct business in Vancouver, and 11 per cent visit the city frequently.