Safety shields, cameras, increased officer presence on table to improve transit safety - Action News
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Edmonton

Safety shields, cameras, increased officer presence on table to improve transit safety

The city operations department wants more money to hire more transit peace officers, while deployment of those already employed is being discussed in the wake of two stabbings on transit in two weeks.

City says "transit is safe" but talks are on-going about crime-fighting strategies

Edmonton police taped off an area early Wednesday morning around the bus where a driver was stabbed at the Mill Woods transit centre. (David Bajer/CBC)

The city operations department wants more money to hire extra transit peace officersin the wake of two stabbings on transit in two weeks.

But the transit system is big and it would be unrealistic to expect 24-7 security coverage for the whole system, a city officials said Friday at a news conference.

Gord Cebryk, deputy city manager of city operations, said his team will ask for more transit officer funding when city council begins its budget debates in November. But he declined to specify anamount, or say how many more officers would be needed to help patrol buses, trains and transit stations.

At the news conference, held two days after a 65-year-old bus driver was stabbed on an early morning shift, Cebryk said repeatedly that "transit is safe."

The attack on the driver followed anotherrandom stabbing of a teenager on an LRT platform on Sept. 18.
Police were called to the scene of the stabbing on the South Campus LRT platform Tuesday morning. (Rick Bremness/CBC)

The system is patrolled by 66 transit peace officers who work in conjunction with Edmonton Police Service officers.

EPSInsp. Derek McIntyre said crimes on transit are less common when there is a security presence. But there are no transit stations that currently have 24-hour security.

"It becomes untenable to think that for 24 a day, seven days a week, we'd have the capacity to put police or peace officers on every bus or LRT station," he said.

"Wework very smartly, we use our analytics to deploy smartly and to deploy in a way that Edmontonians would believe the money they are investing in policing and transit security is being spent wisely," McIntyre said.

Given how many people travel through transit stations, he said, the rates of violent crime are relatively low.

Safety shields to be installed

Meanwhile, the city is advancing on a proposed pilot project that will see retractable shields installed on a small number of buses.

The shields will move up and down easily, like a "regular car power window," said Mark Tetterington, president of the Amalgamated Transit Union's Edmonton local.

He couldn't confirm exactly when the shields will be installed. He said a recent poll of 63 drivers who work late-night routes indicated 100 per cent support for the shields.

It's not the first time city transit drivers have had some sort of shieldinstalled in buses, but Tetterington said previous models were made of heavy acrylic plastic that drivers didn't like.

The bus driver attacked earlier this week was in "good spirits," and was set to be released from hospital on Friday,Tetteringtonsaid.ETSreleased in correct information on Wednesday that said the driver had already been released from hospital.

You have to look at how you put all those pieces togetherand the net impact is a much safer system.- Gord Cebryk, deputy city manager of city operations

Tetteringtonsaid he met with city administration earlier this week to talk about safety, and said he is "very confident we'll get a lot more security out there for our members."

Cebryk, from the city, said safety shields, security presence and cameras are all important when looking at improving transit safety.

"You have to look at how you put all those pieces together, and the net impact is a much safer system."