Proceeds of Crime to Be Reinvested into 21 Frontline Community Safety Initiatives
Examples of initiatives to receive funding under the Proceeds of Crime Front-Line Policing Grant include:
- Providing training for frontline officers to help them better recognize gang activity and gather intelligence on crime;
- Adding community patrol officers to neighbourhoods experiencing a surge in gang-related violence or activity to strengthen relationships with community members and deter at-risk youth from entering gangs;
- Developing and implementing a diversion program to help at-risk youth exit gangs;
- Supporting covert operations run by police, supported by victim advocates, to identify potential victims of human trafficking and hold offenders accountable;
- Providing enhanced trauma-informed training and interview techniques for frontline officers to interact with victims in a compassionate and thoughtful way;
- Bringing together municipal, First Nations and provincial police to improve community responses to human trafficking to help survivors access the supports they need to safely move forward with their lives; and
- Launching comprehensive education campaigns targeting groups that are more susceptible to becoming victims of human trafficking, such as women in low-income groups, Indigenous and immigrant women, and at-risk youth.
“Crime should not pay and that is why we are standing up against criminals who prey on Ontario communities for profit,” said Solicitor General Sylvia Jones. “We are working with law enforcement and their community partners to protect Ontarians through this investment to ramp up the fight against guns and gangs, human trafficking and sexual violence.”
This investment builds on Ontario’s provincewide strategy to fight gun and gang violence as well as its new comprehensive strategy to combat human trafficking.
Quick Facts
- The investment will be made over a three-year period, from 2020-21 to 2022-23.
- To receive funding, police services who applied had to partner with at least two community organizations from different sectors to encourage multi-sectoral collaboration.
- Of the 21 successful projects, five are partnerships between two or more police services. Successful recipients include municipal, provincial and First Nations police services.
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