'Homes not cops,' chants Surrey group concerned over police spending - Action News
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British Columbia

'Homes not cops,' chants Surrey group concerned over police spending

Chanting "homes not cops, homes not cops," the group called Anti-Police Power Surrey stalled traffic on Saturday as they marched along 104 Avenue to Surrey City Hall and then to the RCMP detachment in Whalley.

Police funding comes at the expense of social programs and resources says Anti-Police Power Surrey

Members of a group called Anti-Police Power Surrey called on the municipal government to spend less on policing and more on community programs and housing. (Jon Hernandez/CBC)

A protest group in Surrey says police spending in the city is coming at the expense of housing and community programming.

Chanting "homes not cops, homes not cops,"the group called Anti-Police Power Surreystalled traffic in Surrey Saturday as they marched along 104 Avenue to city hall and then to the RCMPdetachmenton King George Boulevard in Whalley.

Members of Anti-Police Power Surrey marched from Surrey City Hall on 104 Avenue to the RCMP detachment in Whalley on Nov. 24, 2018. (Jon Hernandez/CBC)

Dave Diewert, a long time activist, says the group formed shortly after new SurreyMayor Doug McCallumwas elected on the promise toreplace the city's RCMPwith a municipal police force.

"Policing will never solve the root causes of the social tensions that we call crime," he said.

McCallum'scampaign resonated with voters as the city grapples withdrugs and gang violence.

Jeff Shantz, a criminology professor at Kwantlen Polytechnic University, addressed the protest on Nov. 24, 2018. He says a greater police presence does not address the systemic roots of gang involvement which are poverty, racism, and drug prohibition. (Jon Hernandez/CBC)

Kwantlen Polytechnic criminology professor Jeff Shantzsays though that McCallum's message justified increased spending by playingonfears of gang violence.

"The cops are eating up far too many of our social and public resources," he said."We need those resources in our communities to sustain ourselves."

Surrey is the largest RCMP detachment in the country with more than 1,000 officers, support staff and volunteers according to the RCMP's website.

The federal government picks up 10 per cent of Surrey's policing bill but the city will lose that funding when it cuts ties with the RCMP.

Surrey's police budget will grow to one hundred and seventy million dollars next year.

McCallumhas promised to have the new force in place by two years, but experts are doubtful of the timeline.

Meanwhile Anti-Police Power Surrey promises to continue pushing to have money diverted from police budgets to pay for community centres and youth programs.

Its members say those resources would better address the root causes of crime and violence in Surrey than increased policing.

With files from Jon Hernandez