Panhandling complaints in Moncton provoke joint RCMP-city project - Action News
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New Brunswick

Panhandling complaints in Moncton provoke joint RCMP-city project

Codiac Regional RCMP are teaming up with Moncton bylaw enforcement officersto try to gauge panhandling activity in the downtown.

Mountie, bylaw enforcement officer will hit streets for 2 hours a day to talk to panhandlers

RCMP Supt. Tom Critchlow said there have been complaints about panhandling in the downtown from merchants and the public. (Kate Letterick/CBC)

RCMP are teaming up with Moncton bylaw enforcement officersto try to gauge panhandling activity in the downtown.

Codiac RCMP Supt.Tom Critchlow told a meeting of the Codiac Regional Policing Authority on Thursday evening about a pilot project that started on March 4.

Critchlow said the initiative is about raising visibility.

The Codiac detachment is providing an officer Monday through Saturday to assist a city bylaw officer for two hours a daywalking around the downtown.

Collecting information

The pair will be talking to panhandlersabout their personal circumstances, including what led them to panhandle, and gathering other information, whichwill be compiled for analysis.

Moncton doesn't ban panhandling exactly, but a bylaw puts several restrictions on it. For instance, panhandling isn't allowed within 10 metres of any building in the Business Improvement Area or in parking lots.

Panhandlers also aren'tallowed to restrict the passage of pedestriansorharass people who refuse to give money.

Charles Leger is the chair of the Codiac Regional Policing Authority and a city councillor. He said there have been complaints about 'aggressive' panhandlers in the downtown area. (Kate Letterick/CBC)

Critchlow saidpanhandling is not a matter the RCMP enforce, but they do deal with perceived threats.

He saidthere have been complaints about panhandlers from downtown merchants and members of the public.

"Individuals being followed down the street if they said no, or along those lines, but I think they're the rare ones, few and far between,"he said. "I don't want to alarm people that it's rampant, but it's a concern."

Coun. Charles LeBlanc,the chair of the Codiac Regional Policing Authority, saidhe too has heard complaints from businesses and citizens.

"It's getting warmer now and there seem to be more activities so I think it's an opportunity now to say, 'OK, we need to figure out a strategy and it's going to be a long-term one,'" he said.

Leger saidthis project will help measure how many offences are occurring.

"Moving forward we'll be able to better to assess the number of bylaw enforcement officers that are needed, and I think the RCMP have been very good at providing their expertise and their backup on this," he said.

Leger saidthe matter will likely come back to council for discussion.

Members of the policing authority were told Thursday about the project looking at panhandling activity in downtown Moncton. (Kate Letterick/CBC)

Critchlowsaid he's hoping data collected during the patrolswill help determine what happens next.

"Every day we're intersecting with some of the clients and talking to them, talking to the merchants who are glad to see not just us, but bylaw enforcement." he said.

The program wraps up March 31 and will be renewed monthly.