News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: LTE: Police Might As Well Wear Fast-Food Uniform |
Title: | CN BC: LTE: Police Might As Well Wear Fast-Food Uniform |
Published On: | 2003-11-06 |
Source: | Province, The (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 06:45:48 |
POLICE MIGHT AS WELL WEAR FAST-FOOD UNIFORM
A Province letter writer asked why the police seemingly allow drug
dealers to ply their trade openly on the street near his work site.
Vancouver is like a tall, well-dressed businessman standing over a
urinal. Looking up, you see splendor; down and you see the reality of
the street. Add to this scene an under-staffed janitorial service run
by an absent landlord and the mess grows.
And, the courts have ensured that a police uniform holds all the
authority of those worn by workers at Taco Bell or McDonald's.
Dealers do not fear police because the police are simply the
enforcement arm of a court system that refuses to enforce.
The courts dictate the terms of engagement. But "his honour" will
never leap from a car and fight with a dealer, or spend 11 hours in a
urine-soaked laneway that every cop knows so well.
Yet, his honour has been deemed the most qualified to interpret the
book of rules.
So, the letter writer has walked a foot in the shoes of a city cop and
doesn't like it. Too bad because it's policy, but it most certainly is
not the policy of the Vancouver Police Department!
Carolyn Moore
Pitt Meadows
A Province letter writer asked why the police seemingly allow drug
dealers to ply their trade openly on the street near his work site.
Vancouver is like a tall, well-dressed businessman standing over a
urinal. Looking up, you see splendor; down and you see the reality of
the street. Add to this scene an under-staffed janitorial service run
by an absent landlord and the mess grows.
And, the courts have ensured that a police uniform holds all the
authority of those worn by workers at Taco Bell or McDonald's.
Dealers do not fear police because the police are simply the
enforcement arm of a court system that refuses to enforce.
The courts dictate the terms of engagement. But "his honour" will
never leap from a car and fight with a dealer, or spend 11 hours in a
urine-soaked laneway that every cop knows so well.
Yet, his honour has been deemed the most qualified to interpret the
book of rules.
So, the letter writer has walked a foot in the shoes of a city cop and
doesn't like it. Too bad because it's policy, but it most certainly is
not the policy of the Vancouver Police Department!
Carolyn Moore
Pitt Meadows
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