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Drastic reduction in property crime in last quarter
By Nowell Berg
On November 14, City of Kimberley council held its regular bi-monthly meeting.
Councillors Sue Cairns, Kevin Dunnebacke, Woody Maguire, Jason McBain, Sandra Roberts and Steven Royer were present along with Mayor Don McCormick.
An archive of the meeting can be found on the City of Kimberley YouTube channel. Watch it here.
RCMP Quarterly Report
Sgt. Steven Woodcox, NCO Kimberley RCMP, presented a report on police activities from July to Sept 2023 (Q2). Woodcox told council that âcalls for service were about the same as last year.â
He also noted that property crime was âdrastically reducedâ as three offenders who were targeting Kimberley are ânow in custody.â This has resulted in a drop in property crime.
Woodcox also mentioned two incidents at Wasa.
In July, a three-year old female child was found floating in the water. Two men pulled her from the water and began âlife saving effortsâ that resulted in reviving the child, who has âfully recovered.â He praised the menâs efforts, saying, âWithout them the child would not be alive today.â The men were presented with Certificates of Appreciation.
The other Wasa incident occurred in September. A report from the public concerning suspicious activity drew a RCMP response where they found a male âunlawfully confined due to drug related activity.â A search warrant was executed where âseveral guns and drugs were found.â Three males were arrested at the scene and released by the court the next day.
A new High Risk Youth Committee (HRYC) has been formed to meet regularly and identify youth in âhigh risk lifestylesâ with the intent of getting them help. The committee is made up of personnel from the RCMP, youth probation services, Ktunaxa Nation and schools officials.
âI think itâs very positive. Itâs something we need to spend more time on. A lot of kids out there need support,â Woodcox said.
Responding to a query from Coun. Roberts about the issues these youth face, Woodcox said, âWe see kids who are isolated, whether itâs issues of bullying or issues at home, or drug addiction and mental health.â
Bylaw Enforcement and Animal Control Report
Bylaw Enforcement Officer Sean Lever presented reports to council covering the last six months of activity. He noted that complaint calls were âdown 28% compared to 2022,â attributing to the decrease of âenforcement and education.â Lever added, âresidents are paying more attention to the requirements of bylaws regards to ensuring theyâre dog is on a leash, ensuring they have a license and garbage is secured from wildlife.â
The largest drop in complaints, year over year, was water shortage âdown 60%,â good neighbour complaints âdown 58%,â solid waste âdown 49%,â and animal control âdown 44%.â
Wrapping up his report, Lever told council that recent âsuccess in collecting unpaid fines through Small Claims Courtâ has led to âanother batch [being] filed with the Court Registry.â He urged residents to either âpay or dispute [a ticket]. Ignoring it results in a court summons.â
Snow and Ice Management Plan
Manager of Roads, Ryan Reynolds reported to council there were âno major changesâ to the snow removal plan. He pointed out two adjustments. One will be âextended plowing in Forest Crowneâ to cover the new subdivision. The other is the ski hill road. It will be âplowed first on weekendsâ followed by Townsite hill. On weekdays, Townsite hill would be plowed first, then the ski hill road.
Reynolds noted there has been an âinflux in new workers,â which has resulted in âincreased training and ride-arounds.â He said, âIâm hoping you will not see any hiccup in services.â If residents have concerns over snow plowing, he urged them to call the operations desk, âItâs the most effective way to ensure all your questions and concerns are properly entered, tracked and acted upon by our group.â
Coun. Dunnebacke raised a concern about Townsite hill not getting plowed if the weekend priority was the ski hill.
Reynolds responded, âOur priority group will not impact graders, just a sander and two plow trucks for the early morning shift that will hit the ski hill.â
Mayor McCormick brought up the perennial issue of windrows. âIt galvanizes criticism every year.â
He said, âWe donât deal with windrows,â noting a study done several years ago concluded removing windrows âwould cost $300,000/year (a 3% property tax increase).â
So, windrows are here to stay.
Kimberley city council meets twice monthly starting at 7 p.m. The next regular council meeting: November 27.
e-KNOW file photos
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