Vancouver councillor calls for change on Granville Street strip to make it safer - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 07:13 AM | Calgary | -0.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Vancouver councillor calls for change on Granville Street strip to make it safer

Vancouver Coun. George Affleck says the Granville Entertainment District would be safer if there were more outdoor attractions and patios rather than just night clubs.

George Affleck wants 'a real active street as opposed to just a big party on the street'

Police patrol Vancouver's Granville Street in the Entertainment District. (David Horemans/CBC)

Vancouver CouncillorGeorge Afflecksays it's time to change how the Granvilleentertainment district operates.

TheGranvilleStreet strip in downtown Vancouver can be a safer place for people late at night through more policing and an investment in "patio culture," Affleck said.

"I believe, and I've argued this, that we should be engaging what's going on in the street," he said.

His comments follow the death ofGranvillenightclub worker KalwinderThind, 23, who died after attempting to break up a fight in the Cabana nightclub, which had spilled outon to the street.

Violent crime on Granville Street is a persistent issue. In 2016, a 28-year old woman, Lauren McLellan,was killedatanother Granville Street nightclub.

Affleckcalledformore restaurants withpatiosand positive entertainmentactivitieson the street itself. These changes would allowthe outdoor area to grow and not restrict revelry to behind a night club's closed doors.

"I think if you have more eyeballs on the street, more people who are enjoying street life ... you change the culture," said Affleck.

He pointed to the live entertainment of New Orlean's Bourbon Street as an example.

Hold music concerts

"A real active street as opposed to just a big party on the street."

He said the Vancouver Police Department (VPD), in conjunction with the bar safety association,BarWatch, have done good work protecting citizens on the strip,but revamping the street can help prevent violence from occurring in the first place.

Onesuggestionis to movebus routes to other nearby streets,removing the bus cables that hang over the road, and allowing large sound stages to be erected formusic concerts.

FormerVPDofficer andcurrentchair ofBarWatch,CurtisRobinson agrees it istime for the culture of Granville Street to change.

Robinson endorses outdoor entertainment on the streetand said his organization has been trying to make that happensince 2009.

"We looked at getting street entertainers, emerging bands ... abeer garden ... having a stage and opening it up more or less like New Orleans," said Robinson.

That idea is often brought up at BarWatch meetings, Robinson said.

Affleck said one of the biggest problems on the strip is when inebriated underage people attempt to get into a bar, get turned away, and then mill around looking for fun.

"Don't just have people wandering around ... have live music on the street," said Affleck.

Afflecksaid he made a proposal to Vancouver City Council five years ago to reassess the design ofGranvilleStreet, but it was voted down.

With files from Angela Sterritt