Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Nov, 2022 10:54 AM
  • Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses

Vancouver city council is expected to vote on a motion today launching a flagship promise by the city's new mayor to hire more police and mental health nurses, but the idea facing pushback.

Mayor Ken Sim campaigned on a promise to hire 100 more officers and 100 mental health nurses for programs that partner police with nurses to respond to non-emergency mental health calls.

The motion before council would earmark $4.5 million to the police and $1.5 million to the health authority from the city's operating budget to start hiring in January.

The idea, which is expected to cost a total of $20 million a year, has already received significant criticism from more than two dozen people speaking against the motion at an earlier meeting.

The mayor's office called the promise a vital component to bolster Vancouver’s front-line response to the mental health and addictions crisis in the city.

Stacy Ashton, chair of the BC Crisis Line Network, says involving officers when a person is in a mental health crisis can be "hugely anxiety-provoking" if someone doesn't trust the police.

"Their role is really public safety. Their role is to kind of control the situation and get folks to comply with their instructions," she said.

"And when somebody is in crisis, they're out of control and the worst thing you can do in that moment is take even more of their control away."

MORE National ARTICLES

Jury weighs in after man shot 9 times by B.C. cops

Jury weighs in after man shot 9 times by B.C. cops
The coroners inquest probed the November 2016 death of Daniel Rintoul, who attacked and stabbed a staff member, tried to steal a gun from a gun case and took a hostage at an east Vancouver Canadian Tire. The 38-year-old, nearly six-foot, 350-pound man was shot nine times after repeatedly stabbing one of the officers who was trying to arrest him.

Jury weighs in after man shot 9 times by B.C. cops

Health fund talks end without deal as feds balk

Health fund talks end without deal as feds balk
British Columbia Health Minister Adrian Dix, who called it a "disappointing" end to the meetings, had previously said provincial and territorial ministers were united behind a request for federal funding to be increased to 35 per cent, up from 22 per cent.

Health fund talks end without deal as feds balk

Mayor Brenda Locke releases her top priorities during her swearing in ceremony

Mayor Brenda Locke releases her top priorities during her swearing in ceremony
Mayor Locke's vision and commitment to residents is to ensure transparency, restore public engagement, and maintain Surrey RCMP as the police of jurisdiction. All voices will be heard and I look forward to working with all the residents of Surrey.

Mayor Brenda Locke releases her top priorities during her swearing in ceremony

Canada will work with Congress of any stripe: PM

Canada will work with Congress of any stripe: PM
Voters across the U.S. are headed to the polls to decide whether Republicans or Democrats should wield control on Capitol Hill. Trudeau says the close ties between the two countries have always transcended politics, and he doesn't expect that to change, whatever the outcome.

Canada will work with Congress of any stripe: PM

$475 million more for rural internet: Trudeau

$475 million more for rural internet: Trudeau
The money is in addition to the $2.75 billion already in the government's Universal Broadband Fund, which is dedicated to connecting 98 per cent of Canadians to high-speed internet by 2026 and 100 per cent of Canadians by 2030.

$475 million more for rural internet: Trudeau

Water supply on Sunshine Coast remains 'uncertain'

Water supply on Sunshine Coast remains 'uncertain'
Environment Canada data shows the region just north of Vancouver received 56 millimetres of precipitation this month and 68 mm in the last 10 days of October, but saw only a trace of rain between July and mid-October, when it usually records 200 mm or more.

Water supply on Sunshine Coast remains 'uncertain'