Pubdate: Tue, 13 Dec 2011
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2011 The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Webpage:
Author: Ann Hui
Cited: Eastside Stories: Diary of a Vancouver Beat Cop: 
http://www.beatcopdiary.vpd.ca/

Downtown Eastside

BLOGGING COP CONJURES UP THE SMELL AND TASTE OF MISERY

After Vancouver Police Constable Steve Addison realized he'd made a 
rookie error "" arresting a woman who had an uncapped needle within 
arms-reach that she could have used to stab him "" he didn't try to 
hide his mistake.

He wrote a blog about it.

That post, titled "Wake-Up Call,"  is just one of many that Constable 
Addison, who works in the Downtown Eastside with the Vancouver Police 
Department, has written since September in his blog, Eastside 
Stories: Diary of a Vancouver Beat Cop.

Constable Addison was a newspaper reporter, but turned to policing 
about five years ago. "I was 25 and didn't want to go to city council 
meetings for the next 40 years,"  he says.

He records unflinching accounts on the blog, from the woman who, "on 
a good night,"  will sell her body to 10 different men to make enough 
money to get high, to the young man with three degrees who is 
addicted to heroin and sells drugs to support his habit.

"Do you really know what it's like to see the misery? To smell it? To 
taste it in the air?"  he wrote in the introduction to his blog. "I 
do."  His goal, he says, is to give readers a "front-line, 
unfiltered"  look at life in the Downtown Eastside. Authenticity is 
what drives his blog, he says. "I think if I started waxing on about 
my opinions, I'd lose a lot of people. They want to hear people's stories."

While some critics say the blog turns the people in it into 
caricatures, Constable Addison responds that it's intended to be educational.

He started the blog because he wanted to help those outside the 
Downtown Eastside better understand the community he's worked in for 
the past 4A 1/2 years. "I'm here to give them voice and to help other 
people understand the kind of world they're living in, because nobody 
should have to live in that kind of world,"  he said. The stories are 
meant as cautionary tales too, with teachers and parents telling him 
they use the blog to teach kids about drugs and addiction.

His posts, which range from frustrated accounts of what he sees as 
failures in the system to light-hearted portrayals of the characters 
he meets, are surprisingly personal. In one, about the man with three 
degrees, Constable Addison wrote: "This man was smarter than I will 
ever be, yet it's worthless to him. ... But for a few choices, he 
could be in my shoes and I in his."

Although Constable Addison has the force's support for the blog, 
which bears the official VPD logo on its top banner, he said his 
posts are not vetted. Still, he's aware that he's representing the 
Vancouver Police. Certain things "" cases before the courts or 
details about investigations "" he won't write about.

The initial idea for the blog came from Constable Addison, although 
it is now a part of the VPD's overall social media and community 
outreach strategy. After the Stanley Cup riot in June, the force took 
to social media not only to identify rioters, but also to relay 
information such as Skytrain closings. The force is also active on 
YouTube, Flickr, and Twitter.

Diary is not the first VPD blog. Constable Sandra Glendinning has 
been writing about being part of the dog squad in Behind the Blue 
Line since 2008. Constable Jana McGuinness, a VPD spokeswoman, said 
these blogs help give the force a face to the public. "It's always 
good, we find, that the public hear from front-line officers and 
understand what it's like policing,"  she said.

And people are paying attention. The diary blog gets an average of 
15,000 hits a month, and dozens of comments each post.

But not everyone is impressed. Constable Addison sparked controversy 
earlier this month, after he was asked by the VPD to live-tweet a 
shift. One tweet, about a man who he refers to as First Agent Condor, 
which read: "He thinks he's a secret police agent. Love it!" drew 
fire from critics.

"Instead of making fun of poor people with mental health issues, 
maybe there's a better use of the  account,"  wrote David 
Eby, executive director of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association. 
Constable Addison responded by saying he hadn't meant to offend, and 
that Agent Condor is a good friend.

Others go further in their criticism. Michael Stewart, a writer for 
the blog Rabble, accuses Constable Addison of exploiting and 
sensationalizing the very community he's trying to help. Diary 
"further marginalizes the DTES residents by portraying them as 
caricatures rather than as fully formed human beings,"  Mr. Stewart 
wrote recently .

"The people I see every day are exploited enough,"  Constable Addison 
said in response. "I'm not here to exploit them any more."  The blog, 
he said "is not intended to be voyeuristic. It's intended to be 
enlightening and educational and informative. It's meant to be a good 
thing. Not a bad thing."

Constable Addison initially became a reporter, he said, to "write the 
kind of stories people would tear out of the newspaper and put on 
their fridge."  The blog, he feels, has that kind of impact.

"A comment on the blog I got last night from a recovering addict for 
2A 1/2 years told me he was moved by it,"  he said. "To me, that's huge."

The officer listens

Excerpts from Constable Addison's blog:

On people's perceptions of police:

"Few people are watched as closely in the Downtown Eastside as the 
police. Those who don't understand this place or what we do sometimes 
paint us as insensitive, uncaring and heavy-handed. Others just wish 
we would go away. It's frustrating."

 From "Welfare Wednesday" :

"The bar is almost empty, but my car has now become a magnet for 
drunk people who want to be my friend. One girl taps on the passenger 
window to tell me a joke ... Yet another tells me I'm gorgeous and 
asks for my phone number (ok, she couldn't have been that drunk)."

"I look over my shoulder to see a drunk guy urinating on the steps of 
the Royal Bank. I berate him and tell him this isn't a barnyard. He 
apologizes, zips up his fly, and extends his arm for a handshake. 
Given the circumstances, I decline."

On his frustrations about "the system" :

"And while it's often frustrating to watch people with mental illness 
get let down by the system, and to witness what sometimes seems like 
a revolving door at the courthouse, few things are quite as maddening 
as the apathy and acceptance people in the Downtown Eastside have 
toward crime. I've never seen a place that works so hard to protect 
predators, bullies and cheats ... Too many times I've responded to a 
domestic assault where the victim claims she fell down. Too many 
times I've found a stabbing victim surrounded by a crowd of witnesses 
who claim they saw nothing. And too many times I've been snookered at 
the door of a shelter, a needle exchange or a supervised injection 
site by a staff member who claims my presence makes their "'clients' 
feel uncomfortable."

 From his conversation with a drug addict:

"'I made my choice. I'm a heroin addict and I'll die a heroin 
addict,' he said. It broke my heart to hear."

"People say police officers are not front-line social workers. I beg 
to differ. I'm certainly not one to lecture or pontificate to addicts 
about the perils of their addiction. They don't need to be talked 
down to. And though I sometimes struggle with my own vices, I'm not 
about to tell an addict I can relate to what they're going through 
because of my own addiction to, say, caffeine or exercise or 
late-night blogging. Besides, this guy wasn't looking for answers. He 
needed someone to listen."
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart