Pubdate: Fri, 27 May 2016
Source: Peace Arch News (CN BC)
Copyright: 2016 Peace Arch News
Contact:  http://www.peacearchnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1333

DRUG VIOLENCE OUR PROBLEM, TOO

White Rock/South Surrey is considered a peninsula - not an
island.

Some residents and even some elected officials seem to like to suggest
that drug turf-wars - and their spin-off violence - are a mid-to
north-Surrey problem.

The fact - both historically and currently - is that the trade and the
targeted hits of competitors and enemies are our problem, too.

We didn't really need the news of a drug-lab bust on White Rock's
Parker Street earlier this month - during which police seized several
firearms, $7,000 in cash and a stockpile of illegal drugs - to confirm
that such heinous activities are on our doorsteps.

We couldn't have been that surprised when the shots fired into a house
in South Surrey, also this month, were quickly categorized by Surrey
RCMP as part of a larger pattern of targeted incidents related to the
low-level drug trade.

The shooting death of Corey Bennett in a South Surrey drug house in
2013 was only one in a long line of drug-traffic related fatalities
that have occurred in our own community.

Just six months earlier, 28-year-old Craig Widdifield was shot to
death in a busy shopping centre parking lot in South Surrey, near a
toy store and coffee shop.

Violence stemming from the drug trade and gang lifestyle is not a new
problem, and it is certainly not limited to the region's lower-income
neighbourhoods.

While it's true that a large portion of the shootings we hear about on
an alarmingly regular basis have been clustered between Newton and
Whalley, to think our community is far enough removed from the mayhem
that it's "not our problem" is naive.

We may not have the gunfire ringing out in our neighbourhoods as often
as our north Surrey counterparts, but recent events reveal the drugs,
weapons and criminals are here, and likely have been for some time.

We have heard our city leaders time and time again tell us that the
public is not at risk, that our streets are safe and that the spate of
wild-west-style gun violence plaguing our region will pass - that we
need to "have patience."

But if our community stands a chance at fighting back against this
reckless disregard for safety, law and order, we must recognize it is
as much the Semiahmoo Peninsula's problem as it is everyone else's. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D