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| Vancouver's Hastings Street - the Downtown Eastside, one of the most challenged neigbourhoods in Canada. Photo CC Wiki Commons |
By Gregory Saville
This week I returned to Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, often described as Canada's largest skid row, to work with members of the SafeGrowth Network and several of the city's Community Policing Centres (CPCs). We were there to prepare local instructors for Canada's first SafeGrowth Livability Academy.
It was a milestone. Three Vancouver CPCs participated in the training: the Strathcona CPC, the Chinese CPC, and the Aboriginal CPC. Along with their SafeGrowth and CPTED training last year, Vancouver has now become the first city in Canada to move this far along the SafeGrowth pathway.
Yet the visit was also deeply personal for me.
A PERSONAL JOURNEY
More than thirty years ago, my former business partner and I conducted traditional CPTED projects in this same neighbourhood. While preparing for this week, I looked back at some of those projects. To my surprise, many are still holding up. The lighting improvements, design modifications, and site-specific interventions remain visible decades later.
That should be encouraging. Yet I could not escape another conclusion. Those projects improved places, but they did not substantially improve neighbourhood life.
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I found myself once again walking through areas adjacent to Vancouver's notorious Hastings St in the Downtown Eastside. Decades have passed since I first co-taught problem-oriented policing to British Columbia police officers. Decades have passed since criminologists, sociologists, urban studies researchers, and community development analysts began studying crime, addiction, homelessness, and social disorder in Downtown Eastside. Entire careers have been built examining the Downtown Eastside. Hundreds of reports have been written. Countless interventions have been launched.
Some crime stats have been declining of late (as they have everywhere), yet the situation remains bleak on most categories. The corridor still accounts for a large portion of the city’s serious assaults and robberies. Mental health calls for police service increased, overdose incidents remain high, and from what I could see, street disorder is has displaced and is spreading. And, making matters worse, homelessness has been increasing.
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| Homeless rates concentrated on Downtown Eastside from the metro population demographics and annual homeless counts |
The homeless numbers tell part of the story. In the early 2000s, Vancouver's homeless count was approximately 56 people per 100,000 residents. Today, that figure is approaching 200. Even after accounting for population growth, homelessness has increased dramatically over the past two decades.
WHY DON'T HOTSPOT TACTICS LAST?
For those of us who have spent careers studying crime prevention and community safety, these trends force uncomfortable questions.
Why have decades of hotspot interventions failed to produce lasting change? Why have the various social programs, such as a safe injection site or the many social service agencies here, not prevented the worsening spread of the problem?
Why have so many individual projects succeeded, such as a recent police crackdown, while the broader neighbourhood ecology continues to struggle?
Why has so much effort yielded so little transformation?
I could see that some of the original CPTED improvements we helped design are still functioning. Yet, standing on Hasting Street today, our earlier work seemed all for naught. It brought to mind three guiding principles in SafeGrowth planning:
- Neighbourhoods are more than collections of hotspots.
- Communities are not simply the sum of their crime locations.
- A city cannot solve deeply embedded social problems by repeatedly treating symptoms while neglecting the health of the larger social ecosystem.
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| The Downtown Eastside remains home to thousands of people living with addiction, homelessness, mental illness, and profound social isolation. |
A NEW THEORY ON COMPLEXITY
Since last year I have been working with new colleague, a talented oncological medical researcher, regarding complex adaptive systems. We are studying the power of these systems, (like the Downtown Eastside), and how they exhibit distributed adaptive behavior near critical thresholds. It now seems possible this may be the reason why street disorder continues to displace and spread in spite of enforcement actions. Small perturbations can produce disproportionate, scaling-law effects deteriorate stability. That, in turn, may explain why complex adaptive systems such as tumors and high-crime neighborhoods often resist interventions directed at system manifestations rather than underlying system conditions.
In other words, hotspot policing alone cannot tip the neighbourhood far enough on its own. Much more collaboration and a precise long-term action plan is needed, and that is where the CPCs and their neighbourhood-based Livability Academy might better address the conditions they face every day.
Walking in and around Hastings Street it was clear; there are too many dysfunctional activities, crime hotspots, crime generators, and too few social controls and social stabilizers to help those who suffer and those who work and live there. There is simply no way to arrest, imprison, or hotspot our way out of this disorder.
Downtown Eastside has long ago scaled out of control. I left Vancouver today feeling both discouraged and encouraged at the same time.
I was discouraged because the visible suffering remains. The homelessness, addiction, and disorder that have characterized parts of the Downtown Eastside for decades continue despite enormous investments of effort and resources.
I was encouraged because something wonderful remains. I refer to the dedicated and passionate residents, community workers, business people, and CPC members attending both our SafeGrowth problem-solving training last year and the Livability Academy instructor's course this week.
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| Instructors and some students of the recent Vancouver Livability Academy Instructor Training celebrating their graduation |
GOOD NEWS
I am also encouraged by the Vancouver Police Department's continuing support of their Community Policing Centre’s illustrating both persistent and intelligent leadership.
Those CPCs are staffed by committed, highly capable people. They understand the neighbourhood, the relationships on the street, and the kind of inclusion needed for successful problem-solving. I was impressed by their professionalism and organizational skills. They asked difficult questions. They challenged assumptions. Most importantly, they were already thinking about how to engage people and build long-term neighbourhood capacity.
They are the ones who best represent the heart of SafeGrowth. They know their goal is not simply to reduce a statistical crime blip next month or to remove a hotspot next year. They want their neighbourhood stronger, more resilient, and capable of self-help.
Thirty years ago, I co-taught CPTED and problem-oriented policing in Vancouver. This year, I returned with some SafeGrowth friends to help launch Canada's first Livability Academy. The problems are still here. But so are the people willing to confront them with new skills, a new action plan, and deep connections to the social roots of their community.
After everything I saw this week, I believe the next chapter will not be written by its problems, but by the people working together to solve them.

























