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Hamilton

New police station serving rural Hamilton and suburbs 'on the horizon'

Hamilton's suburbs and rural areas are still years away from getting their own police station, but at least it's on the books now.
Hamilton police's division three office covers Flamborough, Dundas, Ancaster, Binbrook/Glanbrook and the Hamilton Mountain. (Laura Clementson/CBC)

Hamilton police are planning to create a new division aimed at serving the city's rural areas and growingsuburbs.

The project, which will include a new station somewhere in the suburbs, is still years away but is now officially part of police plans.

In a report tabled, Thursday, Chief Eric Girt listed a new divisionfour station serving Flamborough, Dundas, Ancasterand area as a targetfor 2025. The estimated price is $25 million.

Girt, presented the projectas part of list of capital projects at the police services board meeting, said there's still no location, or design, or even an idea of what would need to go in the station.

But a new station is needed, he said. Populations are growing in suburban areas like Binbrook, Elfridaand Waterdown, and the current division three covers the largest geographic area in the city.

This map shows the area covered by Hamilton Police Service's division three. (Hamilton Police Service)

"I don't know where (the new station)will end up," he said. "It's a 10-year projection. The idea was 'let's put it as a place marker.' It's on the horizon."

Currently, HPS has three divisions. Division one is located at the central police station on King William in downtown Hamilton. Division two is at 2825 King St. E. in Stoney Creek. Division three is at 400 Rymal Rd. E.

Division three serves Hamilton Mountain, Flamborough, Dundas, Ancaster, Binbrook and Glanbrook. That means an officer leavingfrom Rymal Road East can take more than half an hour to get to north Flamborough.

Police only broke ground this year on an investigative services building downtown. They expect to move into it infall 2019. That's the priority right now, Girt said. And HPS needs to pace itself on big-ticket items.

A rendering of the new investigative services building, which will sit on a lot bounded by Rebecca, Mary, Wilson and Catharine streets in downtown Hamilton. (Hamilton Police Service)

Coun. JudiPartridge, Ward 15 councillor, said she's been talking to policefor a couple of years about afuture division.

Police dispatch officers from an office in Innovation Park near Waterdown, she said. But big-name crimes, such as the killing of Angelo Musitano in Waterdown, always drumup talk in the community of the needfor a closer station.

$6M to replace radios

Asfor where the station goes, Partridge isn't lobbyingfor anything yet.

"It has to make sense to serve the whole area," she said.

The new station is in the HPS's business plan. It was initially cited as a 2020 possibility, but the investigative services building took priority.

Here are some other items on the capital project list:

  • Replacing portable radio equipment: $6 million (2020-2023).
  • Newconductive energy weapons (Tasers): $335,700 (2019). Right now, police use X26models. Those are being discontinued, the report says, and police need the X2 model now.
  • Roof replacements at the three stations: $1,350,000 (2019-2022).
  • A new mobile command centre: $750,000.