evvabeing
Senior Member
in case this guy is linked to ford, i want to at least say something here about... TCHC's strange reward for help with christopher kotsopolous...
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...tips-sends-the-wrong-message/article13778334/
"Getting witnesses to crime to report what they have seen is a big problem in many Toronto neighbourhoods, where there is a taboo on turning “snitch.” So when residents of a public housing project came forward to talk about the fatal of shooting Christopher Kotsopoulos, it was such good news that housing authorities decided it was worth rewarding. They are showering the Swansea Mews project with $150,000 in repairs. The complex near Windermere and the Queensway will get a new fence, better lighting, an extra security camera and repairs to its laundry room. Local students will get a backpack of supplies before they return to class in the fall, as well.
It’s a nice gesture with the best of motives, but what does it say to the thousands of other public housing residents who have to live with crumbling paint and cracked windows year after year? Toronto Community Housing has a repair backlog of $750-million, a staggering figure. With more than 160,000 residents in 2,200 buildings, it is in a constant struggle to keep up with demands for necessary and long-delayed maintenance. It will strike some TCH residents as odd, to say the least, that the agency can suddenly find the money for Swansea Mews while they are left hanging."
one last thing about this...
TCHC's crime tipster incentive sets bad precedent, say some observers
" The reward, they argue, sends a message to other TCHC tenants that they should “snitch” on their neighbours if they want their maintenance woes addressed sooner.
[...]
Gapka is concerned Jones’ “riches for snitches” incentive will pit neighbour against neighbour, and even highrise against highrise.
“This is the wrong message to send because it will create a society where we won’t trust our neighbours,” she said. “It’s an old Roman Empire tactic; pitting one group of disadvantaged people against another.”
Mitchell Kosny, associate director of Ryerson University’s school of urban and regional planning and a former TCHC chair, called Jones’ reward system a backwards approach to community building.
“It’s almost like they’re rewarding communities for having problems,” he said. “It’s like, ‘We’re worse off than them, so give us money.’ It’s an opposite way of building collaborative networks. I’m not sure community safety comes from a bounty-hunter approach to patrolling hallways.”
David Hyde, an independent security consultant, said the TCHC should foster a broader system of trust between communities and police, rather than “dangling a financial carrot to people in communities where some are desperate for these changes and may be willing to stick their necks out to get them.” "
http://www.mississauga.com/news-sto...entive-sets-bad-precedent-say-some-observers/