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Prince George Citizen February 2, 2023

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PAGE 12

THURSDAY, February 2, 2023

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PRINCEGEORGECITIZEN

Crime soars over other B.C. cities ARTHUR WILLIAMS Citizen staff

Part 2 of an ongoing series Northern B.C. communities can use the experience and revenue from four megaprojects currently under construction to fuel future economic growth, according to a UNBC expert - but they need a plan to make it happen. The Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline from Dawson Creek to Kitimat, LNG Canada liquefied natural gas export terminal in Kitimat, BC Hydro Site C hydroelectric dam near Fort St. John and Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion project from

Edmonton to Burnaby are all expected to be substantially complete over the next two years. So what happens when $88.6 billion in projects and 18,632 construction jobs across northern B.C. (based on 2022 monthly averages) come to an end? “How well communities transition out of the construction phase and move into the operations phase will really depend on how well they planned and took advantage of the construction phase,” UNBC professor Greg Halseth said. “You need to put in place the community you want for the coming decades, and you need to do it before the last construction vehicle leaves your community.”

See TRANSITION AND CHANGE, page 3

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COASTAL GASLINK PHOTO

Construction of the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline is scheduled to be complete in 2023.

Part 2 of an ongoing series Prince George saw a nearly 80 per cent increase in violent crime in 2019, Statistics Canada and Ministry of Public Safety data shows, and while crime has declined in Prince George since then, it has not returned to the pre-2019 level. The city’s Statistics Canada’s Crime Severity Index score went from 169.2 in 2018 to 250.16 in 2019. The Crime Severity Index ranks the amount and seriousness of crime in a community, on a per capital basis, against an average score of 100. According to data released by the B.C. Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General, there were 11,849 Criminal Code offences and 714 drug offences reported in Prince George in 2018. In 2019, there were 19,037 Criminal Code offences (up 60.6 per cent in a year) and 1,106 drug offences (up nearly 55 per cent in a year, despite cannabis becoming legal in October 2018) committed in the city. Of the 19,037 Criminal Code offences committed in Prince George in 2019, 3,145 were violent offences (including three homicides) and 10,550 were property crimes (including 431 motor vehicle thefts). The remaining 5,342 Criminal Code offences were categorized as “other offences” including disturbing the peace, breeches of probation orders, etc. Violent offences were up 79 per cent from 2018 and property crimes were up 58 per cent, compared to 2018. In 2020, the city saw 18,237 Criminal Code offences (3,071 violent including one homicide, 10,081 property, 5,085 other) and 775 drug offences. The city’s Crime Severity Index for the year was 227.03. In 2021, there were 17,016 Criminal Code offences in the city (2,813 violent including six homicides, 10,000 property, 4,293 other) and 506 drug offences. The city’s Crime Severity Index score was 223.92 in 2021.


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