Windsor Star

COLUMNIST CALLS POLICE STUDY DEVASTATIN­G, CHIEF CALLS IT INACCURATE.

FIRE DAMAGES HISTORIC MEADOWS TAVERN

- DALSON CHEN dchen@windsorsta­r.com

Windsor’s chief of police isn’t impressed by a study that says our area has one of the most overstaffe­d police forces in the country.

“It’s not accurate, from the Windsor police perspectiv­e, at all,” said Chief Al Frederick about the Police and Crime Rates report recently released by the Fraser Institute — a conservati­ve think-tank. The study rates our Census Metropolit­an Area ( CMA) — which includes Windsor, LaSalle, Amherstbur­g, Tecumseh and Lakeshore — as the third worst out of 32 CMAs when it comes to efficient policing.

According to the report, our actual number of sworn officers per 100,000 population is far higher than our “ideal” number of officers, relative to our crime rate. Only Saint John, N. B., and Winnipeg, Man., were ranked as being more overstaffe­d with police.

The study bases its analysis on Statistics Canada data from 2001 to 2011.

But Frederick pointed out that the study isn’t really about the efficiency of the Windsor Police Service or any other specific police service. The data concerns per capita rates, and does not distinguis­h between organizati­ons.

As well, the figures used for the study are out of date, Frederick said. He noted that from 2011 to 2014, WPS reduced its complement of sworn officers by 26 — bringing the total from 466 in 2011 to 440 in 2014.

Frederick said the reduction was the cumulative result of retirement­s in the mid and upper management levels. At the same time, WPS actually grew its number of front-line officers through restructur­ing.

“When I took over as chief, (I had) an obligation and a commitment to the community that our service would be just as effective, yet efficient,” Frederick said.

“We identified some areas ... We have really flattened the organizati­on over the last three years.”

Finally, although the study mentions the considerat­ion of “socio-economic factors” in a region’s ideal number of officers, Frederick feels it doesn’t go far enough to account for local circumstan­ces and conditions.

For example, he pointed out that Windsor’s downtown core has about 26,000 seats at establishm­ents with liquor licences. That’s 26,000 potential drinkers in an eight-block radius, in a border city.

“Other communitie­s, university towns — they prepare once a year for homecoming (type events), for that kind of influx,” Frederick said. “We prepare every weekend, yearround.”

There’s also the fact that Windsor hosts a major casino backed by the provincial government — with the province contributi­ng full funding for 21 front-line officers.

“These are significan­t local variances,” Frederick said. “(The report) itself says it’s difficult to anticipate (such factors) from one community to another.”

Told of Frederick’s criticisms, the report’s author — Livio Di Matteo — mostly agreed.

He said the main reason for the Windsor CMA’s poor showing in the study is that our crime rate has dropped by 35 per cent over the analyzed period, but our number of officers per 100,000 population during that period has appeared to remain relatively the same.

“It doesn’t automatica­lly mean you’re overstaffe­d. There may be extenuatin­g factors,” Di Matteo said. “The report doesn’t go into all those ... There are 32 CMAs — and 32 unique cases is a difficult way to structure a statistica­l study.”

Di Matteo said the study’s basic goal was to provide a benchmark that could then lead to more in-depth discussion on a local level.

Frederick said that although he disagrees with the report, he understand­s it’s “a starting place for conversati­on” on the best use of taxpayer dollars when it comes to police.

“Without question, we have a policing model in Windsor that is expensive,” Frederick admitted. “We are not regionaliz­ed. And regionaliz­ation is a much more efficient model.”

Frederick noted that WPS is required by legislatio­n to maintain specialize­d units such as tactical, K-9, marine, and bomb disposal.

“Those are expensive,” Frederick said. “If I had an opportunit­y to leverage those (units) into other communitie­s, it would reduce our costs immensely.”

Asked about the possibilit­y of Windsor-Essex adopting a regional policing model in the future, Frederick replied: “That’s where political will comes in. There has to be a lot of co-operation amongst different municipali­ties to make that happen.

“I’ve said from Day 1 of my term as chief, that’s a model we should be exploring.”

 ??  ??
 ?? NICK BRANCACCIO/The Windsor Star ?? Meadows by the Lake owners Neda Thomas-Jahn, left, and Wayne Jahn are comforted by longtime cook Cindy Csikasz Monday following a fire at the County Road 50 landmark tavern west of Harrow. Amherstbur­g and Essex firefighte­rs were called to the scene...
NICK BRANCACCIO/The Windsor Star Meadows by the Lake owners Neda Thomas-Jahn, left, and Wayne Jahn are comforted by longtime cook Cindy Csikasz Monday following a fire at the County Road 50 landmark tavern west of Harrow. Amherstbur­g and Essex firefighte­rs were called to the scene...
 ??  ?? DAN JANISSE/The Windsor Star A study by the Fraser Institute suggested the Windsor police department is overstaffe­d and inefficien­t.
DAN JANISSE/The Windsor Star A study by the Fraser Institute suggested the Windsor police department is overstaffe­d and inefficien­t.
 ??  ?? Al Frederick
Al Frederick

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada