🚨 Whose City Is This? The Mayor’s $5M DTES Crackdown, Arrest Quotas, and the Truth on the Street
By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
The story keeps changing, and Vancouver’s mayor hopes we’re not paying attention.
First, they announced a $5 million "Task Force Barrage" police initiative in the Downtown Eastside, meant to tackle violence, drugs, and disorder. Then Mayor Ken Sim turned around and said he wasn’t behind it. The chair of the Vancouver Police Board, who’s legally supposed to approve police budgets, said they weren’t even told before the mayor went public.
So who’s running the city—and with whose money?
This feels less like governance and more like damage control.
🧩 The Numbers Game: Arrest Quotas?
We’ve been hearing murmurs—inside and outside the VPD—that officers are being pressured to hit arrest numbers, whether or not it actually helps. That means sweeping people up off the street, pushing them through a system that’s completely overloaded, and then releasing them again with no support, no housing, no help.
It’s a revolving door:
- Arrest. Release. Repeat.
- And each time, the VPD pats itself on the back for the “great work” they’re doing.
But ask anyone actually living in or near the DTES:
Things aren't better. If anything, they feel more tense, more chaotic, and more traumatic.
🎭 The Optics Game: Catch and Release Theatre
They tell the public, “We’re cracking down.”
They post photos of drugs and knives.
They celebrate “task forces” and “strategic enforcement.”
But here’s what’s really happening:
- People in deep crisis are being swept up like trash, held for a few hours or days, and dumped back out.
- Some of these people are dangerous and untreated—but the system isn't helping them get better or making the community safer.
- Others are harmless and poor—criminalized for being unhoused, Indigenous, or visibly struggling with addiction.
No one is winning, except maybe the politicians and executives cashing in on crisis PR.
💰 Where’s the Oversight?
Let’s be real:
If $5 million can be announced without the Police Board even knowing,
If arrest quotas are quietly guiding police behavior,
If the mayor can disown his own press release,
then we don’t have a functioning system. We have a circus—and the people suffering the most are stuck in the centre ring.
✊ We Need Accountability — Not Photo Ops
We need:
- Transparency on who authorized this money.
- An end to criminalizing poverty and illness.
- Support-led strategies, not just more boots and batons.
- Community-run, Indigenous-led programs that offer real safety and healing.
- Housing first, care always.
And we need politicians who stop playing hot potato with responsibility while real people die in our streets, or get brutalized by a system that sees them as numbers, not humans.
💬 Final Thought: You Don’t Get to Hide Behind PR
If you're going to brag about “taking action,”
then own the consequences too.
Because we see through it now.
We’re tired, we’re grieving, and we’re not going away.
Want to help?
🔗 Share this post.
🎤 Tell your story.
📢 Call out the hypocrisy.
#Vancouver #DTES #PolicingCrisis #KenSim #CatchAndRelease #HarmReductionNow #CommunityCare #AccountabilityNotForce #ZipolitaSpeaks
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