
The police priority
Published Monday January 5th, 2009

Urban Report Half of area residents don't consider police station a priority, but mayor and chief say it's beyond that stage

SAINT JOHN - A new police station in Peel Plaza is only secondary in the minds of residents, according to a Corporate Research Associates poll commissioned by the Telegraph-Journal.
Just over 50 per cent of those surveyed considered the initiative not at all important for the city. Only 17 per cent considered it highly important.
While these numbers could potentially scare city officials, Mayor Ivan Court and newly-promoted police chief Bill Reid agree the police station initiative shouldn't be a new priority - because it's an old priority.
"It's not something new," Court said. "It's been ongoing for almost 40 years."
The city's current central police station is divided throughout various levels of city hall, and was only ever intended to be a temporary home for the force.
The mayor said that for the past 11 years of his involvement, he's seen 26 different prospective sites, each with their pros and cons. The lower south end, Chown Field, the Telegraph-Journal site and the eastern side of the Courtney Bay causeway were all considered but eventually shut down.
"At the end of the day, this council and previous council took the direction that they were building a police station, and it was going to be part of a police-justice facility," the mayor said.
Reid says that after so much deliberation over the past few years, the new police station has moved from priority to action.
"We've all but dug the hole in the ground for the facility," he said. "People now have to move on to other issues that will come up over a period of three years, and rightly so people should start looking at other priorities."
Deputy Mayor Stephen Chase is still concerned about the costs of the project in terms of money taken from other initiatives. The CRA poll found the police station was the least important out of four initiatives, including a new water treatment system, road repairs and a recreational multiplex.
"My concern with the Peel Plaza police station is that with the cost that's coming in on it, it's really mopping up all our capital spending for infrastructure projects. It's a tremendously expensive project, albeit it's a need for Saint John to have a good police facility," Chase said.
He said he doesn't want citizens burdened with the costs of the project, nor does he want funds allocated from more pertinent infrastructure projects.
"The fact that we've got such an important community need as water, and we're currently about to build a police station that's in excess of $30 million, it concerns me."
Mayor Court notes that if the station was built earlier, costs wouldn't be so high.
"If they had of built it when I first went on the police commission, it probably would have been $10 million cheaper than what it is today," he said. "Just to move it from one spot to another probably costs us another million and a half dollars, just shifting it and getting other plans drawn up.
"Let's get it built, and people can talk about it later"¦It has to be built."
The mayor says it will bring a slew of positives to the city by retaining jobs uptown and bringing potential developments alongside Peel Plaza, such as condominiums above the proposed parking garage. The Saint John Arts Centre will also receive a $2 million upgrade through the Peel Plaza project.
There are also safety concerns.
"What we're doing now in City Hall in the same building as the police is not safe for policemen, it's not safe for citizens, it's not safe for business," said Court, who's vice-president of the Canadian Association of Police Forces. "That office building had to go as a police station. We need a modern police station for a modern police force. They're building these all over the country, so people shouldn't be upset that we're finally building a police station for our police department.
"I'm not apologizing to anyone. I'm apologizing that it's taken 40 years to get here."
Police Chief Reid says the new station is an important step for the city.
"It's important for the community, and it's important for our members who work out of (the current station). Right now we're very fragmented. It is necessary to do our business out of one facility and to do it efficiently," Reid said.
"In 2010, we'll open the new police facility, and that chapter will be put to rest."
On a scale of 1-10, from 'not at all important' to 'extremely important,' the CRA poll found a mean score of 5.7 and a median score of 5.0 for the police station initiative. Fifty-two per cent of 405 area residents polled rated a score of five or below. Men and older adults put slightly more importance on the Peel Plaza police station project.


Disabled








Search Articles


Comments (14)
All comments are subject to the site Terms of Use. For a full commenting tutorial click here.
Our editorial team relies on filtering technology and our visitor community to identify inappropriate comments. In the event that a site user has submitted offensive content that has evaded our filter, please select the option to Flag As Inappropriate presented within the comment. Thank you for helping to keep this site clean.
This is called holding the Mayor and Council accountable to the Citizens of Saint John.
Please tell us how we will get our moneys worth out of this new site? How will our streets be safer? Where is the extra value?
Remember too, that when you are talking about the time value of money you also need to talk about inflation. $20 million twenty years ago good buy a heck of a lot more then $20 million can today! Also interest rates are lower today then they were 20 years ago too, so we may have benefited from the wait.
and can the victims and suspects on the same elevator bit. If they are in custody, they use the stairs and if they are not in custody, then the courts have deemed it okay for them to be out in public. The same thing will happen in a NEW jsutice complex too!