Showing posts with label Winnipeg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winnipeg. Show all posts

15 March 2016

News Release - Winnipeg Police Service: Results of the Winnipeg Police Service Public Opinion Survey





Source:  mass emailing


Winnipeg Police Service
winnipeg.ca
Includes crime stoppers, neighbourhood watch, redlight cameras, press releases, recruitment.


March 11, 2105
Results of the Winnipeg Police Service Public Opinion Survey
The Winnipeg Police Service’s vision is ‘A culture of safety for all’. Part of the strategy is to continue to build a service that knows and reflects the communities we serve.
In order to determine how the citizens of Winnipeg feel about these issues, the Service contracted with Prairie Research Associates of Winnipeg to conduct a public opinion survey.
Between September 1st and 5th, 2015 over 600 residents were contacted regarding their involvement with, and their opinions of the Winnipeg Police Service.  
This survey is just another way of communicating with the citizens of Winnipeg and using the results to improve as an organization. The results have been made public and are posted on the Winnipeg Police Service Website at: http://www.winnipeg.ca/police/survey/default.stm.

The Winnipeg Police Service would like to thank all those who will take part in the survey and help make our city a safer place to live, work and play.

For further information contact either:
Constable Jason Michalyshen, Public Information Officer
Constable Eric Hofley, Public Information Officer
Kelly Dehn, Manager of Public Affairs


Phone: (204) 986-3061 | Fax: (204) 986-3267 | Email:
WPS-PIO@Winnipeg.ca

News Release - Winnipeg Police Service: The Counter Exploitation Unit and our Uniform Operational Divisions




Source: mass emailing
Winnipeg Police Service
winnipeg.ca
Includes crime stoppers, neighbourhood watch, redlight cameras, press releases, recruitment.

Tuesday, March 15th, 2016

Project CREATE
In 2013 Winnipeg Police Chief Devon Clunis announced the Winnipeg Police Service’s new strategy in relation to sex trade activity in the City of Winnipeg.
In the most recent phase of this on-going project, the Counter Exploitation Unit (CEU) in collaboration with Community Support members from Divisions 11 and 13 ran the CREATE initiative between March 7th-11th, 2016, resulting in the following statistics:


Enforcement:
Ten men, ranging in age from 21-57 years, were arrested for Obtaining Sexual Services for Consideration. In addition, eight vehicles were seized under the Highway Traffic Act.
Five adult males were cautioned by officers for frequenting areas in the city that are known for sexual exploitation. These men were provided with information through the Salvation Army’s Reality Check program.

http://salvationist.ca/2015/12/winnipeg-initiative-targets-sex-trade/

Interventions:
During the project, a total of 22 adult women believed to be engaged in the sex trade were interviewed by officers, and in these cases it was determined that there was little or no degree of exploitation taking place. Officers offered various levels of community supports to the women who were interviewed. These interventions took place in local body rub parlours, hotels, and at the street level.
 
Public Awareness:
In keeping with the public awareness portion of the strategy, members of the CEU have been proactively working with various local hotels in an effort to identify suspected cases of Human Trafficking or sexual exploitation that might be taking place at these locations.
In conjunction with project CREATE, officers conducted on-site visits at eight local hotels that had been previously identified as having escort-related activity. Officers provided staff at these locations with information relating to Human Trafficking and sexual exploitation.
 
 
The Counter Exploitation Unit and our Uniform Operational Divisions are committed to addressing community concerns related to the visible sex trade and working toward sustainable solutions and creating a culture of safety.
Everyone has a role to play in helping to address this issue. If you have information regarding sex trade issues in your community, please contact the Counter Exploitation Unit at 204-986-3464. You can also fill out the online Prostitution Complaint Form by visiting the Winnipeg Police Service website at www.winnipeg.ca/police
   

For further information contact either:
   Constable Jason Michalyshen, Public Information Officer
   Constable Eric Hofley, Public Information Officer
   Kelly Dehn, Manager of Public Affairs

 
   Phone: (204) 986-3061 | Fax: (204) 986-3267 | Email:
WPS-PIO@Winnipeg.ca


20 October 2015

Hillel Winnipeg: Great opportunity for university students, Interfaith Conversation Café.

Great opportunity for university students, Interfaith Conversation Café. For more info or to RSVP, e-mail hillel@jewishwinnipeg.org

29 September 2015

CBC News: Winnipeg among 4 cities eyed for RCMP human trafficking teams

Source:  http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/winnipeg-among-4-cities-eyed-for-rcmp-human-trafficking-teams-1.3246619?fb_action_ids=10153793057862240&fb_action_types=og.shares


Winnipeg among 4 cities eyed for RCMP human trafficking teams

CBC News Posted: Sep 28, 2015 8:52 AM CT Last Updated: Sep 28, 2015 10:19 AM CT
Stephen Harper announced Sunday that a re-elected government would take a number of steps to support victims of human trafficking and target criminals engaged in it.
Stephen Harper announced Sunday that a re-elected government would take a number of steps to support victims of human trafficking and target criminals engaged in it. (Association of Certified Financial Crime Specialists)
The Conservatives are promising a crackdown on "modern-day slavery" by establishing Royal Canadian Mounted Police human trafficking teams in Winnipeg, Toronto, Vancouver and Calgary.
Stephen Harper announced Sunday that a re-elected Conservative government would take a number of steps to support victims of human trafficking and target criminals engaged in it.
The promises include:
  • Investing $8 million annually for five years to establish integrated Royal Canadian Mounted Police human trafficking teams in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary and Winnipeg. The teams would facilitate co-ordination between national and local law-enforcement officials.
  • Doubling current funding to help human trafficking victims reintegrate into society.
  • Establishing Feb. 22 as National Human Trafficking Awareness Day, to coincide with the anniversary of the unanimous decision of Parliament to condemn all forms of human trafficking and slavery on February 22, 2007.
  • Investing $20 million to renew the Human Trafficking Action Plan for an additional five years.
"Human trafficking is not always visible to Canadians but it is all too present in our communities across the country," Harper said, noting that human traffickers are members of organized criminal gangs who force their victims to participate in prostitution and other forms of modern-day slavery.
"We need to do even more to keep young women out of the hands of predatory criminal gangs and make our streets and communities safer."

04 September 2015

Rainbow Resource Centre Library: First published in 1931, Strange Brother is one of the earliest American novels to feature an openly gay character as its main protagonist.

Source: mass emailing


First published in 1931, Strange Brother is one of the earliest American novels to feature an openly gay character as its main protagonist. Out of print for nearly 60 years, its value today as a document of gay literary history is quite immeasurable.
And this fantastic piece of history, a remarkable study of gay life during the 1920's, is now available at the Rainbow Resource Centre Library!!!
Don't wait until this becomes an Oscar-nominated film. Why wait when you can check it out now with a library membership card instead of lining up at Chapters to purchase it?


22 January 2015

Winnipeg Free Press: Winnipeg mayor ready to face racism 'head on'

Source:  http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/Magazine-criticizes-Winnipeg-as--289439741.html?cx_navSource=d-top-story


Winnipeg mayor ready to face racism 'head on'

  •  Print
Mayor Brian Bowman‎ affirmed the city's commitment to confront ethnic divisions at an unprecedented press conference in response to a magazine article declaring Winnipeg the most racist city in Canada.
The cover story in the latest issue of Maclean's, authored by former Winnipegger Nancy Macdonald, examines the casual and institutional racism afflicting indigenous residents of the city. It cites Winnipeg's ethnic divisions as the worst in Canada.
The story was first published online Wednesday night. ‎On Thursday over the noon hour, Bowman - the city's first indigenous mayor - gathered more than three dozen city officials, councillors, educators and indigenous leaders outside his office and declared Winnipeg will confront its ethnic divide.
"We're here together to face this head on, as one community," Bowman in the foyer outside his office, following a smudge inside his office.
Derek Nepinak, grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs‎, said there are people who are "willfully blind" to the challenges faced by indigenous Winnipeggers and lauded community activists who get up every morning and challenge racism.
Manitoba treaty commissioner Jamie Wilson noted his home reserve of Opaskwayak Cree Nation and The Pas came together after national media cited the communities as the most racist in Canada.
Winnipeg Police Chief Devon Clunis reaffirmed the need for Winnipeg to engage in a "difficult conversation" about its ethnic chasm, while former Canadian grand chief Ovide Mercredi spoke of confronting ‎racism without becoming bitter.
Oddly, given the focus on missing and murdered indigenous women, no women spoke at the event.
Bowman concluded by noting Winnipeg will not end racism tomorrow, but must try anyway.
Tearing up, he noted his wife is of Ukrainian descent and he is Métis and hopes his kids are just as proud of both.
After the press conference, Bowman said it was important ‎to seize on the Maclean's story as an opportunity to address Winnipeg's problems.
When asked why do that when Winnipeg media do so on an almost daily basis, he said it was an important ‎story that moved him personally.

Article points to numerous racist incidents

Maclean’s builds its story around the horrific murder of Tina Fontaine, the 15-year-old aboriginal girl whose body was found wrapped in plastic and thrown in the Red River in August of last year. There have been no arrests in the killing and the case continues to serve as a key edge in the community’s simmering racial divide.
"One woman said a week doesn’t go by that she isn’t harassed walking downtown, that someone doesn’t call her a stupid squaw or tells her to go back to the (reservation), honks at her or offers her money for sex," author Macdonald said in an online preview interview. "People will tell you they feel racial profiling by police; they feel they’re not treated fairly in hospitals. It’s a really deep issue.
"From there, we went to Winnipeg and realized there is a huge degree of racism that aboriginal people in the city face," Macdonald says in the video.
The Maclean’s article points out that Winnipeg’s reputation has taken a severe hit over the last few months, detailing a number of reported incidents in the city over the last five months of 2014.
There was Kelvin High School teacher Brad Badiuk, now on unpaid leave as the investigation into Facebook postings Badiuk made about indigenous people continues. Rinelle Harper, a teenage aboriginal girl, was found on the banks of the Assiniboine River after she had been badly beaten. Former councilor Gord Steeves, in the middle of a mayoral race, had his campaign come off the rails after Facebook comments his wife Lorrie made about aboriginal people came to light.
In a description of Winnipeg that remarkably spans only a handful of months, the examples of racism build in theMaclean’s piece to uncomfortable levels. There was an incident where Inuk throat singer Tanya Tagaq, the 2014 Polaris Prize winner, was sexually harassed by a man in downtown Winnipeg in October. Poll after poll came out, painting a picture of not only Winnipeg as a racist community, but a city that fully recognizes the issue.
On top of those numbers, the results of the Brian Sinclair inquest were released over this stretch of time, as well, offering possible explanations on how an aboriginal man could be left to die in a hospital emergency room for 34 hours.
The future has yet to be written, though, and while the article positions Winnipeg in an less-than-desirable light thanks to its deep racial and cultural divide, the situation appears to be turning around.
Bowman's election earns mention, as does the work of former mayoral candidate, and now federal hopeful, Robert Falcon-Ouellette and of Jamie Wilson, who currently serves as treaty commissioner for the province.
"I see a real opportunity right now – with the level of engagement over these very serious and difficult issues – to make a difference," Bowman told Maclean’s in the article. "If my own family’s heritage can assist in building bridges in various communities in Winnipeg, then that’s an opportunity I fully intend on leveraging. I want to do everything I can."
Wilson told Maclean’s that Fontaine’s death was the tipping point in the racism conversation in Winnipeg.
"You couldn’t deny it anymore," he said. "Right now, we’re stuck in a trap. We’re going to have to acknowledge it. Or it will forever hold us back."

25 October 2014

CBC News: Group plans to drag Winnipeg's Red River for bodies - 09 Sept 2014

Source: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/group-plans-to-drag-winnipeg-s-red-river-for-bodies-1.2760404

Group plans to drag Winnipeg's Red River for bodies

CBC News Posted: Sep 09, 2014 7:06 AM CT Last Updated: Sep 09, 2014 9:53 AM CT
Group plans to drag Red River in search for bodies
Group plans to drag Red River in search for bodies 0:54
claudette osborne
Claudette Osborne was 21 when she went missing in 2008. (Manitoba Integrated Task Force)
Some families of missing women in Manitoba are planning to drag the bottom of Winnipeg's Red River for bodies.
“We don't know possibly if there are bodies in there [but] we need to do something. We're tired of just sitting in our houses and waiting for somebody else to find them," said Bernadette Smith, whose sister Claudette Osborne disappeared in 2008 and hasn't been seen since.
“The water washes away evidence, so that would be a good place to start looking, searching.”
Smith said when the body of Tina Fontaine was found in the the river last month, it made her wonder how many others could be down there. So she created a group called Drag the Red.
Tina Fontaine
Tina Fontaine, shown in this Facebook profile picture from January, was discovered in a bag in the Red River in August. (Facebook)
"Finding a 15-year-old in a garbage bag thrown in the river certainly brings a call to action for our community," she said.
The Drag the Red group will attach dragging poles to boats to rake the bottom of the Red.
On Sunday, a feast and pipe ceremony will be held at the Alexander Docks, where Fontaine's body was recovered.
Then the search begins next week.

via Facebook-Aboriginal Youth Opportunities: Bell Tower honoured the volunteers from Drag The Red tonight. We are all the village!

Bell Tower honoured the volunteers from Drag The Red tonight. We are all the village!
Today we honoured the volunteers from Drag The Red at our Bell Tower Gathering. Thank you to all of our community members for standing together tonight to celebrate and acknowledge the leadership of our village! #stoptheviolence #bringthelove — with Althea Guiboche and 2 others.

Photo: Today we honoured the volunteers from Drag The Red at our Bell Tower Gathering. Thank you to all of our community members for standing together tonight to celebrate and acknowledge the leadership of our village! #stoptheviolence #bringthelove

22 October 2014

Winnipeg Free Press: Brian Bowman wins mayoral battle

Source: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/special/civicelection2014/mayor/Bowman-wins-mayoral-battle-280134002.html

Brian Bowman wins mayoral battle

Posted: 8:54 PM | Comments: 61
Last Modified: 9:41 PM | Updates

Brian Bowman is Winnipeg's new mayor.
Winnipeg voters turned their backs on a career politician and chose an inexperienced outsider who promised them a better, prosperous future.
The lawyer who was endorsed by the city's business elite pulled off a come-from-behind victory Wednesday night, trouncing veteran New Democrat MP and MLA Judy Wasylycia-Leis.
On her second try and after a down-to-the-wire race, Wasylycia-Leis lost by an even larger margin than she did in 2010 to Sam Katz.
Wasylycia-Leis vote collapsed Wednesday night, and the NDP’s vaunted get-out-the-vote machine failed. It appears she lost much of her support to Robert-Falcon Ouellette.
"What’s next for me?" said Wasylycia-Leis on stage in the ballroom at Fort Garry Place. "I will continue to fight with every breath I’ve got to build a stronger city."
She also thanked supporters, saying she was humbled by their steadfast support.
"We didn’t make it, but we did make a difference," she said.
She praised Ouellette, and said she called to wish Bowman well.
"I said you deserve the votes you got. You ran a hard campaign, you ran a solid campaign," she said.
She pledged to work with him "to build a city that works."
Bowman has not yet entered the reception hall at the Inn At The Forks where his supporters are gathering.
When Bowman entered the race in early June, few people outside of media and the Chamber of Commerce crowd knew who he was: In December he had the support of only 11 per cent of voters, while Wasylycia-Leis was sitting pretty with 45 per cent and all the experts were pointing to her certain victory in October.
Winnipeggers went into this election campaign demanding change at city hall. Katz's last term as mayor was wracked with allegations of severe administrative mismanagement, cronyism and hints of improper dealings between the development community and city hall.
The past year also saw Winnipeg plagued with significant infrastructure issues: Thousands of homes and businesses across the city went without water when a frigid winter froze water lines; and, in the spring pot holes and water main breaks devastated city streets.
All the mayoral candidates promised they could restore integrity to city hall but they offered distinct alternatives to the infrastructure issues.
The top two vote-getters had offered voters starkly contrasting platforms: Wasylycia-Leis, the New Democrat, pitched a small "c" conservative campaign platform; but, Bowman dared Winnipeggers to dream about what their city could become and promised he would make that dream a reality.
On election day, Winnipeggers opted for the dream.
The 2014 mayoral campaign featured several strong candidates with distinct platforms. In addition to Bowman and Wasylycia-Leis there were former councilllor Gord Steeves, Coun. Paula Havixbeck and outsiders David Sanders, and Robert-Falcon Ouellette.
There was an anti-Judy/anti-NDP element to the campaign but with so many alternative candidates splitting that vote, it appeared Wasylycia-Leis would easily win.
Wasylycia-Leis was initially able to hold her core support, similar to what she received in her losing 2010 election bid.
She chose to challenge the anti-NDP bias with what she called her basic "meat and potatoes" platform, fixing city hall and fixing infrastructure with a modest cost and modest tax increase. She presented herself as a career politician with 30 years experience who knew her way around the corridors of power
Bowman, the conservative, was promising a dramatic overhaul that would propel the prairie city into the future, with only vague assurances he knew how to pay for it all. His plans included cuts to civic departments, building six bus transitway corridors, help for community centres and new downtown amenities.
Bowman, a red Tory who was once considered as a possible leader of the Manitoba PCs, presented his outsider status as an advantage, and portrayed Wasylycia-Leis as "more of the same old, same old," that had brought city hall to ruin.
Both Bowman and Wasylycia-Leis waged the campaign relying on efficient organizations. Hers was culled from the ranks of organized labour and the NDP; Bowman attracted dedicated, like-minded, enthusiastic individuals from the business community. His prominent supporters include the NHL Jets' Mark Chipman, chamber president Dave Angus, Winnipeg Art Gallery director Stephen Borys, and Obby Khan, the still-popular former Blue Bomber and restaurant operator.
Waslycia-Leis had appeared to learn from her wildly erratic, losing bid for mayor in 2010. This time out she made few modest promises but she was often inarticulate, had difficulty explaining the financing behind the simplest of promises, and refused to criticize the governing provincial NDP -- which some pundits and other candidates repeatedly used against her.
But for most of the campaign, Wasylycia-Leis' safe strategy appeared to be working: She commanded a comfortable lead in every poll until Monday.
The anti-Judy vote coalesced around Bowman but she was unable to grow her support.
Bowman worked his way up from that December underdog who only had the support of 11 per cent of decided voters. By the end of August, he climbed modestly into third place with 16 per cent; on Oct. 1, he passed Gord Steeves into second spot, with 23 per cent; and then, three days before voters cast their ballots, the last poll had Bowman edging past Wasylycia-Leis into first and he carried that lead to victory.