As soon as the 2010 Olympic Games are over, the Vancouver Police Department will be moving in to a the facility now occupied by the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (VANOC). The Richmond Police Department will be taking over the headquarters of the Integrated Security Unit, a 2010 Olympics specific police unit which comprises the RCMP, the VPD and RPD, and the Canadian Forces.
“This move has been long anticipated and we are very pleased that the timing was such that our new building will be a valuable and cost efficient legacy of the 2010 Winter Games,” said VPD Chief Constable Jim Chu in a January 18 press release.
The move to reward police with new office space doesn't surprise critics of the Games.
"It's very appropriate that the police would move into the VANOC headquarters, since that's their little puppet masters for the duration of this Olympic regime that they've imposed on the city," said Gord Hill, the editor of no2010.com and member of the Olympics Resistance Network.
"They also got other facilities that they have now, including the Force Options Training Center near Clark Drive and First Avenue, so you see a real expansion of the police forces here in the city, as a result of the Olympic security budget that they put in place," said Hill. The Force Options Training Center is almost complete and will be ready for 2010.
Chris Shaw from 2010 Watch told the Vancouver Media Co-op that rewarding police with new equipment and new offices paid for by taxpayers was typical of the Olympics.
"[International Olympic Committee President] Jaques Rogge was very clear about this, he said you get a 'Security Legacy' and he's exactly right, that what you get," said Shaw. "Unfortunately most of us don't want that."
Both the federal government and the City of Vancouver have prioritized the upgrading of police facilities over the provision of other services in these difficult financial times. The feds will contribute $5 million to the move, and the City will contribute $10 million.
The idea that the 2010 Olympics would leave a positive legacy for Vancouverites, specifically for poor people in this city, has long been forgotten.
In addition to the boost for local police, tangible Olympic legacies for Vancouver will go to real estate developers like Bob Rennie, who developed and is marketing the 2010 athletes village through his company Rennie Marketing Systems, and to the corporations that got in on the flurry of Olympic spending while the getting was good.
The site for the Vancouver local of The Media Co-op has been archived and will no longer be updated. Please visit the main Media Co-op website to learn more about the organization.
Commentaires
good article, but I'm pretty
good article, but I'm pretty sure that Richmond does not have a police department; that job has been outsourced to the RCMP last I checked. I only mention it because there is a BIG difference between the two.
For a guy that used to chum
For a guy that used to chum around with both the RCMP AND the Vancouver Police every Remembrance Day, Chris Shaw sure likes to distance himself nowadays, doesn't he? I notice that he doesn't dwell very long on his history in the American, Canadian and Israeli army either - is that because it diminishes his chances of getting in the pants of that 20 year old angsty pro-palestinian anarchist chick with the pink hair?
Just askin....
For a guy that used to chum
For a guy that used to chum around with both the RCMP AND the Vancouver Police every Remembrance Day, Chris Shaw sure likes to distance himself nowadays, doesn't he? I notice that he doesn't dwell very long on his history in the American, Canadian and Israeli army either - is that because it diminishes his chances of getting in the pants of that 20 year old angsty pro-palestinian anarchist chick with the pink hair?
Just askin....
respond
People in the world get the loan in various banks, because this is easy and fast.