Admiral Beez
Superstar
Roadside panhandlers
Every day I drive home from the west end, I exit from the Gardiner at Jarvis, and head along Lakeshore and up Parliament to Cabbagetown. Almost every day while I wait for my light at the bottom of Jarvis and the
Lakeshore, I encounter several people walking up and down the rows of stopped cars holding out cups, trying to make eye contact and begging for money.
My understanding is that the Safe Streets Act and Highway Traffic Act prohibit solicitation of persons on roadways. Thus, I was always perplexed by the lack of police enforcement, particularly as 51 Division is
just a few blocks away. Meanwhile, motorists, trapped in their cars waiting for traffic must avoid the fellows, roll up their windows and wonder how this is permitted when the law prohibits roadside solicitation. When tourists visit Toronto from the Niagara border or anywhere west, they will often come down the Jarvis exit on their way to a sports event, theatre show or a downtown hotel, and roadside solicitation is the last thing our tourists need to see.
Thus, I was very pleased to see two bicycle mounted police officers on Wednesday this week stopping the two panhandlers from roadside soliciting and I believe issuing tickets. Of course the panhandlers were back
yesterday, as enforcement is not consistent, but I was still pleased with Wednesday's events.
How can we let the police know that their work on this corner is important, and appreciated? How can we achieve consistent and regular enforcement in order to rid Jarvis/Lakeshore of this problem? Should I call my local police department, or my local city counsellor?
Every day I drive home from the west end, I exit from the Gardiner at Jarvis, and head along Lakeshore and up Parliament to Cabbagetown. Almost every day while I wait for my light at the bottom of Jarvis and the
Lakeshore, I encounter several people walking up and down the rows of stopped cars holding out cups, trying to make eye contact and begging for money.
My understanding is that the Safe Streets Act and Highway Traffic Act prohibit solicitation of persons on roadways. Thus, I was always perplexed by the lack of police enforcement, particularly as 51 Division is
just a few blocks away. Meanwhile, motorists, trapped in their cars waiting for traffic must avoid the fellows, roll up their windows and wonder how this is permitted when the law prohibits roadside solicitation. When tourists visit Toronto from the Niagara border or anywhere west, they will often come down the Jarvis exit on their way to a sports event, theatre show or a downtown hotel, and roadside solicitation is the last thing our tourists need to see.
Thus, I was very pleased to see two bicycle mounted police officers on Wednesday this week stopping the two panhandlers from roadside soliciting and I believe issuing tickets. Of course the panhandlers were back
yesterday, as enforcement is not consistent, but I was still pleased with Wednesday's events.
How can we let the police know that their work on this corner is important, and appreciated? How can we achieve consistent and regular enforcement in order to rid Jarvis/Lakeshore of this problem? Should I call my local police department, or my local city counsellor?