Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Comments closed.

Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.

Please see our Commenting Policy for more.

Growing concerns of car break-ins leaving Winnipeggers feeling defeated

Repeated car break-ins have some Winnipeggers saying enough is enough. Global's Abigail Turner spoke with one woman who's been a target multiple times – Sep 14, 2022

Ashley Murray moved to Elmwood in Winnipeg earlier this year. So far, she says her new neighbourhood is unsettling.

Story continues below advertisement

“You’ll hear car alarms go off here all night, every night here, all night, you’ll hear them go off in the distance or close.”

She first noticed the crime in her new neighbourhood when her delivery driver called her to say he was robbed with a machete for her food order.

“I said oh my god are you OK, do you want me to call the police?”

That incident was the first of many she says. Her vehicle was broken into and later her tires were slashed.

“I had posted in a group, like an area group, and a lot of people when I posted said my vehicle got broken in to as well or my window got smashed last weekend so it’s kinda an ongoing thing.”

Story continues below advertisement

The crime Murray sees isn’t isolated to her neighbourhood, says Jackie Dykeman, a property manager at a building on River Avenue.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

“It’s happening almost nightly around here,” she says.

She’s been in the building for more than 30 years and says crime has gotten worse recently.

“Two vehicles in here have had tools stolen, catalytic converters stolen, my vehicle was broken into, they stole prescription sunglasses, anything they can get their hands in to,” she says.

Winnipeg police say in the first six months of 2022 there have been 5,464 reported thefts from vehicles.

That number is on track to exceed last year’s numbers where 7,148 vehicle break-ins were reported.

Story continues below advertisement

Dykeman checks her buildings camera’s for thieves as she says tenants routinely ask her to look at the footage.

Video cameras can be a useful tool, but according to Mar Potts, chairperson for the Citizens on Patrol Program (COPP), it’s not a solution.

“(Winnipeg residents) feel very safe because they’ve got the cameras but, that’s protecting their house, their home, but that’s not going to address the community’s safety.”

Story continues below advertisement

Neigbourhood safety is something Potts says is important in addressing the root cause of crime.

“All lot of neighbours have said, ‘we never thought we’d have the level of crime that we do,'” says Potts.

It’s a disappointing realization for many people like Murray in Elmwood who says it may be time to try something new.

“It’s almost like you know, I’m better off taking a bus or not having a vehicle.”

It’s a decision that may seem extreme, but one that comes after an exhausting battle of break-ins and thefts that seems to have no end in sight.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article