2 Victoria businesses call on city to pay for private security amid concerns of increased crime
Ryan Burghardt owns Budget Break and Muffler on Douglas Street in downtown Victoria. He says a drastic increase in crime is hurting his business.
"Random kicking (of) vehicles, breaking mirrors," said Brughardt. "Unfortunately, on a couple of older vehicles last week, we had two stolen within 24 hours."
He says crime in his Bay Street neighbourhood has exploded over the last two months. He says the people committing these crimes are repeat offenders that he has caught on camera before.
"(It's) catch and release," said Brughardt. "The one guy who stole one of the vehicles was in jail two days before stealing a converter."
Just down the street at Ina Motors, the car dealership has had four catalytic converters stolen from cars on its lot over the last 45 days.
"This costs us roughly $2,000 a vehicle," said Masood Abdul, general sales manager for Ina Motors.
Overall vandalism to vehicles has also gone up, he says, and is more than his operation can absorb.
"Right now, it’s really terrible," said Victoria Police Chief Del Manak.
The chief agrees, crime is on the rise and his officers are feeling it on the street, he says.
He says part of the problem is how quickly police are forced to release people from custody and that all stems from federal legislation under Bill C-75, which came into effect in 2019.
"Essentially, for anyone to be kept in custody generally now, the crime has to be quite egregious," said Manak. "It has to be somebody's life that has been threatened. It has to be crimes against a person."
Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps has written a letter to B.C. Attorney General David Eby about the justice system.
The letter says this policy of "catch and release" is not working and asks if there is a way to hold an accused until it’s better determined if that individual is a threat to reoffend.
The attorney general says no, and says his government is taking a different approach.
"We have an initiative called 'complex care' to recognize that the courts and the prisons are not going to be taking people in the same way they did previously," said Eby. "(The province is looking) to make sure people are stable in housing with increased mental health and addictions supports.”
Meanwhile, back on Douglas Street, both Ina Motors and Budget Break and Muffler are calling on the city to help pay for private security.
"We think the city should pay for that," said Burghardt. "We didn’t cause this problem, we’re paying property taxes on few buildings between us all and it’s nightly."
Victoria city councillor Marianne Alto told CTV News on Wednesday that she recognizes there is a problem and is working with partners to come up with solutions. Part of that solution could be to hire private security for the area.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Former soldier 'Canadian Dave' taken by the Taliban: sources
David Lavery, a former Canadian Forces soldier who helped approximately 100 people flee Afghanistan during the fall of Kabul, has been 'picked up' by the Taliban this week, according to multiple sources who spoke to CTV National News on the condition of anonymity.
Canada Revenue Agency eliminating nearly 600 term positions by end of 2024
The Canada Revenue Agency will be eliminating approximately 600 temporary and contract employees across the country by mid-December.
Alta. Premier Danielle Smith will be in Washington for Trump inauguration
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith will be heading to Washington, D.C., for Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration.
WestJet passengers can submit claims now in $12.5M class-action case over baggage fees
Some travellers who checked baggage on certain WestJet flights between 2014 and 2019 may now claim their share of a class-action settlement approved by the British Columbia Supreme Court last month and valued at $12.5 million.
Montreal road rage caught on video: Suspect charged with assault causing bodily harm
A 47-year-old Terrebonne man has been charged following a case of road rage in broad daylight last summer on the Ile-aux-Tourtes bridge.
Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul: How to watch the fight, what time and who's the favourite?
YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul had to wait an extra four months for his high-profile match with 58-year-old former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson, but fight night has arrived.
Interest in moving to Canada soars amid fears about Donald Trump: immigration lawyer
Fears about the next Donald Trump administration have led to more interest in moving to Canada, including from high-profile individuals, according to an immigration lawyer.
Love story: Nova Scotia couple gets engaged at Taylor Swift’s Toronto show
A Nova Scotia couple fulfilled their wildest dreams Thursday night when they got engaged at Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour in Toronto.