Asterix
Active Member
d) officer numbers and transport capacity might have been lacking in the S. Yonge area, or perhaps, if adequate to bring several hundred officers into the area, not optimally pre-positioned to cordon off groups of people rapidly.
That, I think, is the biggest hurdle. Most people just do not grasp the logistics involved in this sort of thing.
Saturday evening, you've got the mob burning a police car at King and Bay. You're the police commander and you've got a few hundred police at your disposal.
First you get them organized in a coherent manner to retake an intersection that currently has the sort of people who will burn a police car. You move in and secure that area, obviously in a controlled manner and not just a free-for-all charging stampede.
Your rioters have then been pushed elsewhere, in this case presumably east. Once you've secured King and Bay, you now need to deal with the next event. But where? Will the rioters head south to try and get at the fence? Will they head north? Will they try and double back to Bay? If they head north, how far north? To Queen? To Dundas? All the way to Bloor?
You now hear they are breaking windows heading north of Queen, so you decide to load up several hundred officers to meet them. Those highway coach buses hold what, around 50 people (complete with all their equipment)? How long does it take to get a crowd of people, even police officers, on half a dozen buses? Some officers can jump in minivans, but those only hold a max of 6 (remember they need all their gear). Bike cops aren't about to be lugging shields with them either.
You need to ensure you've got adequate escorts for the buses (last thing you need is for a mob to surround a bus and prevent your officers from deploying), so this would mean bike cops, cruisers, motor cycle cops, and get everything moving north, presumably heading to Yonge and College.
Once you get there, you've now got to get everyone off the buses, hooked up with their shields, organized into sub-units, lined up, all while figuring out what your specific tactics will be for a situation you haven't had the chance to properly assess, let alone predict where it will move next.
How long does it take to load up a family of four to head out on a day trip? Is it any great surprise they can't instantly move 200 cops from one location to another a mile away on a moment's notice?