Fredericton trail patrol shouldn't bring back 'move along' policy, advocate says - Action News
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New Brunswick

Fredericton trail patrol shouldn't bring back 'move along' policy, advocate says

Dr. Sara Davidson saysif officers justmove people from one place to another, it will makethem less visible, more vulnerable and less likely to get access to emergency medical help.

With no safe-consumption sites or permanent housing, patrol has few places to direct people living rough

Woman with long salt-and-pepper hair
Dr. Sara Davidson says making homeless people less visible won't bring back the city people knew before the opioid and addiction crisis. (Gary Moore/CBC)

When it comes to homelessness, the goal of Fredericton's new community safety unit is to help people living rough and those using drugs find the right services, according to the city.

But adoctor who works closely with people who use drugs said these services don't exist.

Dr. SaraDavidson saidif officers justmove people from one place to another, it will make peopleless visible, more vulnerable and less likely to get access to emergency medical help.

"We don't have a resource centre anymore. There's no warming centre or no cooling centre, there's no permanent spot for people to go," said the director of River Stone Recovery Centre in Fredericton.

"There's no safe-consumption site So until we put those things in place, where are we moving them to?"

Three uniformed men pose together in front of a trail sign.
Community safety officers Robert Smith, Luc Levesque and Seth Hajdu will patrol the streets and trails in Fredericton by foot or on e-bikes. (Jeanne Armstrong/CBC News)

Last week, the city hired eight uniformed private security officers to patrol trails and the downtown areas. The idea for this safety unit came after public consultations with residents and business owners.

The officers' mandate is to addressconcerns about graffiti and other vandalism, petty thefts under $5,000and people living rough or panhandling on the streets.

'Who really is at the greatest risk?'

Davidson said people living rough are citizens, too, and aren't just a threat to others. She saidpublic drug use is"certainly is a safety issue for the person who's using the drugs," especially considering the increasingly toxic drug supply.

"My question is who really is at the greatest risk?"

Davidson said it's notthat individual officers will be increasing harm, it's that their ability to help is limited ifharm reduction and mental health services don't get more resources.

She said it's not one or the otherharm reduction or public safety it isboth. But so far the response has been heavy on the policing side, light on the other, she said.Only Moncton has a safe-consumption site, and shelters are over capacity in most places in the province.

"Not-for-profits aretrying to fill giant chasms in our social safety net, which has long eroded, and it's an impossible task," Davidsonsaid.

"Now the cracks are just even wider, and suddenly there's policing and,you know, community safety teams to try to push along this idea that we're going to be able to get back to some kind of pre-homelessness-crisis place, but we're just not."

Various items lay strewn all over a wooded area.
Fredericton police dismantled four tent camps across the city last year. The new community safety officers would help monitor and notify police of camp locations. (Aidan Cox/CBC)

Shasta Stairs, spokesperson for the City of Fredericton, said the city and the Fredericton Police Force are regularly asking the province to increase the availability and diversity of shelter space, along with space for support services.

"We understand that there are complex needs amongst those who are living rough," she said. "We are working hard with community partners in the housing space to find options."

Community safety officer Seth Hajdu previously told CBC he will be spending a lot of histime talking to people living in tent encampments about city bylaws and making sure they're following the rules, and will also be keeping track of those in need of food and housing.

"When dealing with the homeless, our main goal is to clean up the streets and not just treat the homeless like crap," said Hadju. "We need to give them respect."

Davidson every step will be a Band-Aiduntil governments start addressinguntreated addiction and other mental health issues.

"[The patrol] is not going to deal with the underlying problem and it's not going to make us all be safer in the long run, which is when people are housed."

With files from Information Morning Fredericton