Peachland POST YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
The week of January 3, 2025
LAND RIGHTS It may be time to give natural resources some legal standing P.6
LOCAL SPORTS Columnist sacrifices his dignity for education P.8
Visit our website at peachlandpost.org • Vol. 1 Issue 1
ABOUT TOWN Find out what’s going on and where it’s happening P.11
NO DEFENCE Hit and run of frontyard fence a hardship for local senior P.3
TRENDS IN 2025
Crime in Peachland: Keeping a lid on it By most measurements, crime is low in Peachland. RCMP plan to keep it that way…
By Jeff McDonald Staff Reporter
M
ark Twain famously condemned statistics, comparing them unfavourably to damn lies, presumably because of their ability to be taken in different ways. That would certainly seem to apply to one notable crime stat in Peachland for 2024; cases of break and enter into residences were up 700 per cent over 2023, a number sure to start tongues wagging. But digging into the data reveals that breakins rose from just one in 2023 to eight in 2024. It’ s hardly a tsunami of property crime but nonetheless, police did respond, says
West Kelowna RCMP staff Sgt. Brendan Dolan. “That’s an increase and a trend we don’t want to go towards but we were able to start tasking some members to tackle that issue and identify the people responsible,” said Dolan. “In a small community like Peachland, a major file can really have a large impact on the community, so that has to be taken into consideration when talking about crime trends.” Dolan and RCMP inspector Jason Charney, operations officer for the Kelowna regional detachment, spoke to the Peachland Post just before Christmas about crime rates in town for 2024 and SEE POLICING PAGE 7
John McDonald photo illustration
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TO ALL.
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