British Columbia·Video

Vancouver's mayor says he wasn't behind push for $5M DTES police crackdown

How the Vancouver Police Department got the green light for a $5-million campaign to reduce crime in the Downtown Eastside — or if it needed it outside approval at all — continues to be murky.

VPD board chair not told of Task Force Barrage budget before announcement, leading to questions of process

No paper trail for $5-million VPD task force

2 days ago
Duration 2:19
New questions are being raised over how Vancouver's police department got $5 million for a crackdown on the Downtown Eastside. Task Force Barrage was announced in February, but the money was not authorized by council, and the police board chair said he had no advance notice of it. As Justin McElroy reports, the lack of a paper trail has raised the ire of one councillor.

How the Vancouver Police Department got the green light for a $5-million campaign to reduce crime in the Downtown Eastside — or if it needed outside approval at all — continues to be murky.

"Coun. Fry's insinuations that direction for Barrage came from the mayor's office is false. To be clear, Task Force Barrage is a VPD-led initiative that I fully support," said Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim, in response to Coun. Pete Fry's filing of a freedom of information request for more transparency on the origins of the high-profile VPD campaign.  

As Justin McElroy reports, Fry filed the FOI after VPD Board Chair Frank Chong said the board wasn't aware of Task Force Barrage until it was revealed in a media announcement.

"We need to know that that authorization for police operations is not coming out of the back room in the mayor's office," Fry said.

"There seems to be no paper trail." 

While Sim said Barrage is a VPD-led initiative, in April, the VPD characterized it as a "joint initiative by Vancouver Police and the Council". A VPD spokesperson said that was because council had committed to funding the project — but no formal vote has yet taken place.

The conversation around the proposal is inherently tied to larger conversations in Vancouver around public safety and the VPD budget.

Ken Sim in black glasses looks down in a close-up photograph of him.
Mayor Ken Sim announces a new initiative to dismantle organized crime in the Downtown Eastside neighbourhood of Vancouver, B.C., on Thursday, Feb 13, 2025. (Ben Nelms/CBC)