Pubdate: Thu, 15 Apr 2004
Source: Hour Magazine (CN QU)
Copyright: 2004, Communications Voir Inc.
Contact:  http://www.hour.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/971
Author: Martin Patriquin

CAMERA OBSCURA

The next time you see him, take a moment to pity that poor drug dealer on 
the corner of Berri and Ste-Catherine.

Look at him, decked out in those oversized hip-hop jeans that hang on for 
dear life off his skinny white ass. He makes his living one dime bag at a 
time and has to hustle like hell to do it. He looks like he can barely 
afford his own Eminem affliction, let alone the layers of junk jewellery he 
heaps on himself and his girlfriend. Poor bastard.

And now, the cameras are coming.

It seems the local business owners and homeowner types have had enough of 
him and his kind, and persuaded the police to install security cameras in 
various spots around Berri metro station, as well as along Berri and 
St-Denis streets - the latter an avenue almost as treacherous and unstable 
as Baghdad, if you listen to what some area merchants are saying.

St-Denis between Sherbrooke and Rene-Levesque is "the only spot in Quebec 
where drug trafficking is practiced openly, on the street," sniffed Richard 
Fradette, director of the Societe de developpement du Quartier latin, to La 
Presse last week. (This would be news to anyone living on Ontario Street 
between St-Hubert and Papineau, but I digress...)

Other merchants have complained that profligate drug use, vandalism and 
crime have scared their clients stiff. One fellow says he even has to run 
to and from his car when attending St-Denis Theatre, just to avoid the 
hoards of riff-raff. Poor bastard.

Whether any of this is true - and judging by the size and affluence of the 
crowds flocking to St-Denis Street in the summertime, you could make a good 
case that it isn't - doesn't really matter. The fact is, people are scared 
- - scared of crime, scared of squeegee punks, scared of panhandlers, scared 
of spray paint and scared of difference.

So, as is common with scared people, they panic and do something 
wrongheaded, ineffective and dumb. In the process, they make things a 
little more perilous for the rest of us. These cameras, part of a 
four-month pilot program, are wrong, pure and simple.

Let's see, where to start? Right. The drugs. Yes, there are drug dealers 
near Berri metro. Yes, they can be annoying - and, on rare occasions, 
dangerous. They are the reason the police and/or metro cops have one or 
more vans permanently affixed to the street corner outside the metro. 
Sometimes fights break out. Sometimes cars are vandalized. Often, arrests 
are made. Such is life.

But putting up cameras in front of the metro - and anywhere else, for that 
matter - punishes anyone else who walks by there. Yes, the police have 
sworn up and down that they'll view the recorded tapes only in the case of 
an "incident," or if they are investigating a crime. But that means you 
have to trust the police, and so far they've refused to tell the public 
where, exactly, they'll put these cameras, or how many there will be. It's 
for our own protection, they say. Nor did they say exactly in what cases 
the tapes will be viewed. Is it drug dealing? Spray-painting? Begging? 
Skateboarding? No one knows.

Let's be totally honest here for a moment. The area in question is hardly 
overrun by drug dealers. It does have more than its fair share of homeless 
people, street kids, skaters, punks and hangers on, though, and those 
cameras could indeed come in handy in identifying them, not to mention 
keeping tabs. The very act of installing cameras in a public place is an 
invitation for abuse, a way of trivializing something that should never be 
banal, or routine.

Here's another group on which we should keep tabs and thoroughly punish. 
They cause 22 per cent of the deaths on Quebec roads, amounting to 
thousands of lost lives every year. They cause 17 per cent of serious 
injuries. They do so by speeding in their cars, something of which one in 
two Quebecers is guilty, according to the province's insurance association. 
But the second you suggest photo radar, people scream Big Brother. An 
all-too-intrusive cash grab by the government, they say. As a result, photo 
radar will likely not be seen in Quebec for a long time, maybe never. Until 
then, people will continue speeding, and dying.

Why have surveillance cameras and not photo radar, you ask? Simple: People 
who drive have more clout than those who hang out in front of Berri metro 
for business and pleasure. Drug dealers - and the punks, squeegees, 
panhandlers and street kids who vastly outnumber them - are a 
voter-friendly problem that is easy to deal with: Just install cameras to 
placate the scared.

And what happens when those dealers are sufficiently scared enough to leave 
the area for another, less scrutinized neighbourhood? Not to worry, the 
Montreal police say. We have a contingency plan. Again, the police refused 
to elaborate, but it isn't unthinkable that it will involve more cameras. 
And remember, the same police force had a contingency plan to deal with 
those hookers flushed out from the corner of St-Laurent and Ste-Catherine a 
few years back. The result? Those same hookers moved east, to poorer 
neighbourhoods. You see many of them near Berri metro station, oddly enough.

Here's another fun fact about cameras: They don't really work in the long 
term. Yes, they can help in smaller towns like Baie-Comeau and Sherbrooke, 
where there are few other places to run. But here in Montreal, we have 64 
other metro stations - including a handful where foot traffic compares with 
that of Berri. The logical equation, then, isn't more security. It's more 
cameras.

And consider the sobering example of London. That city installed cameras on 
street corners in the late 1980s, in response to the many IRA bombings of 
the time. The result? Not one IRA bomber caught, though the bombings 
continued. To this day, the cameras remain. This in a country now seriously 
considering countrywide biometric identification cards.

Are surveillance cameras and these ID cards cause and effect? No. But the 
cameras sure set a nice precedent. It's all for our own protection, after all.

Hence, these cameras, which will remain on the streets till the fall as 
part of a pilot project.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom