Taking a swing at crime in Moncton's old west end - Action News
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New Brunswick

Taking a swing at crime in Moncton's old west end

Residents of Moncton's old west end say crime is on the rise in the neighbourhood, and they're organizing in hopes of stopping it. Dianne Reddy is so fed up, she keeps a baseball bat by the door.

Residents work on fighting crime in the neighbourhood beginning with reporting it to police

Dianne Reddy lives in Moncton's old west end, where she keeps a bat by her door to scare off would-be thieves. (Tori Weldon/CBC)

Residents in Moncton's old west end say crime is on the rise in the neighbourhood, and they're organizing in hopes of putting a stop to it.

Dianne Reddy is so fed up, she keeps a baseball bat by the door.

"If I find anybody on my property that doesn't belong here, day or night, I am not afraid to use it," she said.

"The police know about this. They told me it's not a good idea, but at this point I really don't care."

Reddy has lived in the neighbourhood for 21 years but said a recent rash of thefts has made her consider leaving.

Inthe last two years, she said, her car has been broken into at least a dozen times, and her key chain containing both her car and house keys was taken twice.

"They had gotten the keys out of the house in October but I didn't know that."

Reddy assumed she had misplaced her keys, until she woke up one morning to find her car missing.

"The police found my car with a couple in it. They had my keys."

She is vigilantabout keeping her car and home doors locked, but it feels as ifthieves will "take whatever is not nailed down."

Coun. Charles Lger says people should report crime, so police will get a better understanding of where it's happening. (Tori Weldon/CBC)

Others in the tree-lined neighbourhood feel the same frustration. So much so, that when a meeting was held this week to discuss the increase in crime, about120 people showed up.

"The perception obviously is that the number of crimes of opportunity have increased in this area and people don't feel safe,"said Charles Lger, theMoncton city councillor who represents the ward.

Lgeris also chair of the Codiac Regional Policing Authority,the group responsible for overseeing planning, police coverage and fiscal management of Codiac RCMPfor Moncton, Dieppe and Riverview.

The authority posts a monthly crime map, which shows only three incidents of property crime in the old west end reported in each weekbetween July 1 through July 7, and July 7 through July 14.

The Codiac Regional Policing Authority Map for the week of July 7 shows three reported incidents of property crime in the old west end, fewer crimes than residents say occurred. (Submitted CRPA)

Lger said crimes recounted at the meeting do not match with the crime statistics kept by the RCMP. This is because people don't always call the police, he said.

"Very few of these crimes were reported this summer. Because they're not reporting it doesn't really indicate to the RCMP that there's an issue there.

"So they're frustrated and the residents are frustrated."

Lger said getting the right data can help the RCMP understand where crime is happening and how best to curb it.

The idea of a neighbourhood watch was also raised at the meeting, with people in the community volunteering to start the process.

Didn't report bike thefts

Rhonda Bulmer, wholives in the neighbourhood,said she attended the meeting and learned the problem could be bigger than she thought.

"People were a lot more worried than I realized," she said.

Three bikes were stolen from her backyard three years ago. She didn't call the police because she didn't see the point, but she's since learned it's better to report even minor crimes.

Dianne Reddysaid she likes seeing the community come together to make their own solutions because she likes her neighbourhood. She raised her children in her old west end homeand lived therewith her late husband.

She doesn't want to leave and hopes she doesn't have to.