The link has interactive graphs for ‘Transit-related violent crime rates per 100,000 people in Canada’s cities’

An excerpt:

A number of factors could be contributing to violent crime rates both on and off transit systems, said public transportation consultant David Cooper.

“The environmental circumstances that we’ve seen on transit have changed so much since the pandemic. We’ve had this opioid crisis. We have a mental health crisis. We have an affordability crisis. We’ve seen a difference in what’s occurring in our public spaces — and transit is not immune to this,” he said.

Cooper explained that during his ride-alongs with police, he observed much of the violence is committed by a relatively small number of people who have repeated encounters with officers and are often not homeless.

“An individual who is homeless is not committing crime on the transit system,” he said. “Typically a lot of violence that we’re seeing is very much around individuals who prey on vulnerable individuals.”

In 2023, Cooper wrote a series of recommendations for the Canadian Urban Transit Association, designed to address safety concerns. It includes calls for better housing and mental health support, and funding for more security and enforcement positions.

Just this month, the TTC announced a new safety plan that includes hiring additional staff to be present at stations, improved crisis response training and better security monitoring. The TTC is also implementing a crisis worker program for some portions of the subway system.

Winnipeg launched its own plan in September to address violence on transit, increasing police patrols on transit routes and in facilities.

Calgary has invested $15 million annually into its strategy, which includes dozens of new transit peace officers and connections with social services, while Edmonton is expanding its specialized transit safety police teams.

  • JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    The numbers are per 100,000, but importantly it’s per 100,000 population - not per 100,000 ridership.

    I don’t see anything in the methodology to account for population changes nor transit ridership increases. Both of which could produce these results without any tangible increase in violence. .

    Using Toronto as the example, this article outlines a “assaults on Toronto-area transit leapt by 160 per cent”, which is referencing the increase from 18/100k to 35/100k. Looking at the TTC’s ridership data, 2014 saw 535 million riders, and 2024 crossed 800 million. This shows ridership and violent incidents have changed by a similar proportion - each increasing slightly less than 50%.

    Only listing one of these data points reeks of disinformation to me. I half expected to see an F-150 ad halfway through the article.