‘Raid’ on funding to expand police services has Victim Services worried
The Provincial VSU Association states that services to victims of crime will be impacted by the UCP government’s Victim of Crime Act amendments now being considered.
Victim Services is putting out the word that a funding diversion of surplus monies will go towards hiring police officers and increase police programs instead of helping victims of crime as intended.
The Victims of Crime Amendment Act, or Bill 16, “will see the tearing down of the fundamental principles entrenched in the original Victims of Crime Act created in 1990,” states Alf Rudd, President of the Association in a June 1 news release.
“A ploy such as this does a great disservice to them (victims), and those dedicated to supporting them,” said Rudd. “Association members have already felt impacts of victim funds being redirected for public safety initiatives as requests for operating funds have been reduced and training dollars all but eliminated.
“This is the wrong move for this province,” he added. “Funds need to first address the needs of victim services while any expanded use be judiciously considered after consultations with the victim serving community.”
At present, there is a $74 million surplus fund the province is eyeing to help with its enhanced policing initiative. Rudd said the surplus is due to “frugal use” of funds collected by community organizations under the original act’s mandate to collect a surcharge on fines assessed for various offences.
“If this legislation is successful,” he said, referring to Bill 16, “the Solicitor General will arbitrarily have unfettered access to the fund to provide more police, more prosecutors, and fund other undefined public safety initiatives.
“This amounts to a raid on a fund that for 30 years has carefully and prudently provided a safe landing for those criminally and brutally treated.”
However, Minister of Justice and Solicitor General Doug Schweitzer defended the move, stating the expansion in scope of the Victims of Crime Fund to include public safety initiatives would deter crime and prevent victimization.
The government plans to use the Victims of Crime Fund to fund the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Teams (ALERT), the Rural Alberta Provincial Integrated Defence (RAPID) Force, drug treatment courts, and the hiring of more Crown prosecutors.
Instead of being used for the victim services for which the funds were collected, the monies will go towards organized and other serious crimes like illegal drug and gun trafficking, and online child exploitation. Funds will also go towards breaking addiction cycles related to crime, and more Crown prosecutors to keep perpetrators off the streets.
“Our government has heard loud and clear from Albertans that they are frustrated with a justice system that does not make them feel safe, secure and protected in their communities,” said Schweitzer.
Rudd noted that “these are not tax dollars,” but meant to support victim serving organizations in providing services directly to victims of crime and other tragedy, including that in Flagstaff.
Flagstaff VSU Coordinator Noreen Metz says she supports hiring more police, more Crown prosecutors, and help for those with addictions. “That is not the issue, however; that is not what the fund was intended for.”
She says recent changes leave the application of the surcharge to the judge’s discretion. “This can and will impact the amounts going into the fund.”
“The money supports a cohort of volunteers in every corner of Alberta to be there in times of crisis to support and assist when tragedy strikes,” said Rudd.
The surplus funds “guarantee sustainable support for victims for many years and, therefore, no reliance on tax dollars, an achievement unlike no other in Canada,” Rudd asserted.
Metz says, “The money collected needs to serve the victims of crime. People need Victim Services in each and every detachment area.
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