Surprise Attack! Revolution carried through by small conscious minorities

Surprise Attack! Revolution carried through by small conscious minorities
Kabul in the Republican Revolution of 1973

Thursday, January 26, 2023

NIAGARA ANTI-RACISM ASSOCIATION WANTS A CIVILIAN GROUP TO RESPOND TO SOME POLICE CALLS (CKTB 610AM)

https://www.iheartradio.ca/610cktb/1.19148371 

NIAGARA ANTI-RACISM ASSOCIATION WANTS A CIVILIAN GROUP TO RESPOND TO SOME POLICE CALLS

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The Niagara Region Anti-Racism Association wants a civilian group to respond to some calls, rather than armed police officers.

The group has sent a letter to Niagara Region Councillors in advance of their Budget Review Committee Meeting of the Whole.

They are asking Niagara Regional Police to reduce their operating budget by shifting funding to a civilian service for welfare check, mental health and other non-urgent calls.

Saleh Waziruddin with the association says it would not only be fiscally responsible, but also morally and socially responsible to shift calls which don't need an armed response to a civilian service specialized in those issues. 

Waziruddin will join CKTB's Tim Denis on Niagara in the Morning Friday at 7:50 a.m. with more details.

Here is the letter sent to councillors:

Dear Niagara Region Councillors,

At your January 12, 2023 Budget Review meeting many of you made a point about being    fiscally responsible, to the extent of changing the addition of three staff needed to take        
additional customer service calls from permanent to temporary positions, even though it did 
not change the cost.

It would then be fiscally irresponsible of you to not ask the Niagara Regional Police to come back with a lower operating budget where calls that do not require a police response were shifted to a civilian (non-police) dispatched service. The Niagara Regional Police Service 2020 annual report (page 10) list of the top 2019 service calls, welfare checks (#3), mental health act (#12), and welfare checks “non urgent” (#16), made up 11,024 or 8.4% of all calls (from a total of 131,834, slightly different than in the Operating Budget presentation). This would be a significant reduction of the operating budget by shifting funding to an alternative service that not only would cost less but would not involve police in social problems, something they themselves say is not their purpose.

There is also a moral and equity reason for shifting these service calls away from police, not just a financial one. Welfare checks and mental health calls do not all require an armed response and can escalate dangerously and unnecessarily with the police, who are not the inappropriate service for these calls. We saw this last year with the police killing of a Black man in Port Colborne where the Special Investigations Unit report (Case # 22-OFD-229) said the police response “may not have been perfect” and that “more ought to have been done” to “address the mental health issues.”

We need to do better than “may not have been perfect,” especially where our lives are at stake. It would be irresponsible, not just financially but also morally and socially, to not ask for a different operating budget proposal that shifts welfare check and mental health calls to a civilian service specialized in those issues.

Thank you,
Saleh Waziruddin
Niagara Region Anti-Racism Association (executive committee member)"

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