Calgary's recovery rate for stolen bikes improving, police say - Action News
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Calgary's recovery rate for stolen bikes improving, police say

Back in 2019, police were returning only 12 per cent of stolen bikes to owners. Now, the recovery rate has more than doubled to 30 per cent. Police say they're using proactive investigationsto find them.

Rates of return have more than doubled since 2019

Tom Brodrovics pictured with his recovered mountain bike. (Helen Pike/CBC)

When Tom Brodrovics's $10,000 mountain bike disappeared from his Calgary garage, he thought it was gone for good.

Stories aboutstolen bikes don't usually have a happy ending, and his had been taken without a trace.

"It doesn't feel good when you see something that you use every day, and there's a lot of feeling attached to it, and it's gone," he said.

Brodrovicscalled the police, but he was already resigned to the bike's fate, andremembers thinking: "We're not going to ever see it again."

But on Monday,about a month after it was taken,Brodrovics received a callfrom a constablewho described a bike they'd found and itwas his.

"I cannot thank [him] enough,"Brodrovics said.

In previous years, the chances of getting a stolen bike back were slim in Calgary. Back in 2019, for example, police were returning only 12 per cent of stolen bikes to owners.

Nowthey say the recovery rate for stolen bikes has more than doubled to 30 per cent, andthey're using proactive investigationsto find them.

Proactive investigations

More than 1,000 bikes have been reported stolen to Calgary police so far this year,and many other theftsgo unreported, Const. Phil Tabelon said.

ButTabelonsaidthe bike unit team recovered 55 bicycles this month alone.

"If they're reporting the bike stolen, it makes it easier for us to reunite owners," he said.

"But we will still do our due diligence and try to get the bikes back [when we find them]."

Const. Phil Tabelon of the Calgary Police Service says more than 1,000 bikes have been reported stolen so far this year. (Helen Pike/CBC)

That due diligence includes asking people about their bikes and inquiring about abandoned ones many people unknowingly buy a stolen bike, Tabelon said, while others find one that hasbeen ditched.

Meanwhile, bike shop stickers and serial numbers can provide puzzle pieces. Police callthe stores to find out who purchased the bikebefore getting in contact with them.

They also combsocial media pages dedicated to stolen bicycles.

"[Owners] don't have faith that they're going to get their bikes back, but we're always on the lookout," Tabelon said.

The Calgary Police Service has partnered with Bike Index, a website where people can register their bicycles for free, to aid in returning stolen bikes to their rightful owners.

Underlying causes

While stolen bikes are being recovered in higher rates by police, some in Calgary's cycling communitysay it will require more than enforcement to eliminate bike theft to begin with.

Molli Bennett, the president of Bike Calgary, saidunderlying causes need to be considered. She said it's important to understand why people might be choosing to engage in behaviours that contribute to social disorder.

Molli Bennett, president of Bike Calgary, says cycling is booming in the city, but bike theft presents a barrier to participation. (Helen Pike/CBC)

"[So] what we can do as a society, and as a city, to make sure those folks are supported and they don't feel like they have to turn to that option," Bennett said.

Cycling is booming in Calgary, Bennett said, buttheft presents a barrier for participation.

"Bikes are incrediblyimportant to people who use themand when a bike is lost, no matter what the value, it can feel really personal and upsetting," she said.

"For some, that's their mode of transportation, and a loss of that means a loss of access to transportation."

Encouraging widespread, secure and accessible bike parking can help prevent it, she said, and increasing foot traffic helps, too.

"The more that we activate our spaces, and the more livable and walkableour communities become, the more people are out and about and the more vibrant the streets are," she said. "And that is proven to reduce theft."

With files from Helen Pike