Windsor considers motion detectors in parks to deter vandals - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:25 PM | Calgary | -11.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Windsor

Windsor considers motion detectors in parks to deter vandals

City's wasting valuable resources to repair vandalism at a time when staffing levels are already stretched thin, explained parks manager Yvan Mantha.

Parks staff regularly repairing damaged lawns caused by vandals

City of Windsor is considering installing motion detectors in public parks to crack down on lawn damage caused by vandals who enter the parks illegally with their vehicles. (CBC News)

Windsor parks staffare considering installing motion-sensor cameras in public parks in orderto catch vandals who regularly destroy the grasswith their vehicles.

Sneaking into parks and tearing up the turf by spinning a vehicle's tires is a long-standingtradition among young vandals.

Cityparks manager YvanMantha has seen this sort of damage consistently during his 30 years of working in Windsor, but the work is more noticeable when resources are spread thin because of budget cuts.

City of Windsor parks manager is considering installing motion-sensor cameras in public parks to catch images of vandals tearing up lawns in their vehicles. (CBC News)

"It may seem like more of a problem because everybody's more aware of that dollar," he said. "Wedon't have as much staff andeverything costs more money."

When resources were more plentiful, staff could afford to spend half a day repairing a vandal's damage, but not in the existing financial landscape, Mantha said.

He and his staff have looked at motion-sensor cameras used by hunters who set the devices up along trails to identify animal patterns. Similarly, Manthacould install cameras in parks and capture images of license plates as a way to catch the vandals.

"We're looking at something that's at least clear enough to take a picture of a plate because that's the only way we're going to catch them," he said.

Residents upset

Jessie Lee often watches the headlights of cars and trucks whipping around the night sky from her home near Tranby Park.

She regularly sees teenagers gathering in the green space that she usesregularly for walking.

Jessie Lee regularly sees vandals driving vehicles in Tranby Park, tearing up lawns and creating work for city staff.

"You see the lights going round and round...really fast," she said. It's "like they're having a really fun time with the cars on the lawn of the park."

Lee never noticed vandalsbringingtheir vehicles intoTranbyfive years ago. But once a nearby parking lot was built, drivershad easier access to the park.

As frustrating as the damage is for city staff and residents, Lee tries to understand what the vandals are doing.

"They're just being young kids, having fun," she said. "It hasn't really ruined the park that noticeably. If it continues or gets to be every night, then yes, it would bother me a lot."