Crime rates high in Waterloo Region but clearing crime is low: Stats Canada
Crime rates in Waterloo Region continue to be among the highest in Ontario, while the clearing of criminal cases is among the lowest.
At Wednesday’s meeting of the Waterloo Regional Police Board they discussed the 2023 reported crime data from Statistics Canada.
According to the report, the Crime Severity Index in Waterloo Region decreased by four per cent from 2022 to 2023, going from 79 to 75.5, but is still the third highest among the 12 largest police services in the province. Those include places like Toronto, Windsor, London and Niagara.
The Crime Severity Index measures the volume and severity of police-reported crime in Canada, and has a base index value of 100 for 2006. It includes violent offences, crimes against people or property, and other Criminal Code violations.
The Stats Canada report also noted an 11 per cent drop in robberies and a 33 per cent increase in the use of firearms to commit an offence.
Clearance rates
Weighted clearance rates represent the number of criminal incidents solved by police. Out of the 12 other large police services, Waterloo Region ranked second last when it came to clearance rates in 2023 and last in violent crime clearance rates.
“But I can say we're dedicated to taking every investigative avenue possible to not only meet the clearance rate to capacities, but also helping victims of crime in anyway possible,” WRPS Chief Mark Crowell said at the board meeting.
One factor, he explained, is the number of officers in a community as big as Waterloo Region.
There are fewer than 800 officers to serve more than 600,000 people. Statistics Canada ranked the region second last compared to other policing services.
Crowell said they are dedicated to solving more crimes but are doing the best with what they have.
“There's no acceptable level of non-cleared crime. There's also major complexities in terms of our investigators capacity,” he said. “Within the comparative landscape, Waterloo Regional Police has the second lowest officer to population ratio amongst those featured and but we also had the highest number of violations per officer and the second highest clearance rate per officer.”
The report concluded that crime reflects many factors that “extend beyond the rise in criminal activity”.
“Such as the community’s trust in reporting to police, the ease and services available when reporting, available police resources, police service priorities, crime prevention measures, targeted enforcement practices, and other avenues of reporting crime that do not get relayed to the police,” the report read.
Crowell added strategic enforcement, encouraging citizen reporting and public education will continue moving forward.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING Air Canada, pilots reach tentative deal, averting work stoppage
Passengers with plans to fly on Canada's largest airline can breathe a sigh of relief after Air Canada said Sunday it has reached a tentative agreement with the union representing more than 5,200 of its pilots.
They came from Jamaica for work, now they're homeless and out thousands of dollars in lost wages
Abuse of Canada’s temporary foreign worker program has left a group of carpenters from Jamaica 'destitute' after an Ottawa company refused to pay them for nearly half a year of work.
Beef with your neighbour? Here are your rights in Canada, according to a lawyer
If you have beef with your neighbour and you feel it's gone too far, what should you do? A personal injury lawyer has some advice.
As plant-based milk becomes more popular, brands look for new ways to compete
When it comes to plant-based alternatives, Canadians have never had so many options — and nowhere is that choice more abundantly clear than in the milk section of the dairy aisle.
4 years ago, a 'Trump Train' convoy surrounded a Biden-Harris bus. Was it political violence?
Texas jury will soon decide whether a convoy of supporters of then-U.S. president Donald Trump violently intimidated former Democratic lawmaker Wendy Davis and two others on a Biden-Harris campaign bus when a so-called 'Trump Train' boxed them in for more than an hour on a Texas highway days before the 2020 election.
Inflation expected to ease to 2.1%, lowest level since March 2021: economists
Economists anticipate that Canada's annual inflation rate in August fell to its lowest level since March 2021.
'Shogun,' 'The Bear' and 'Baby Reindeer' are at the top of the queue as the Emmys arrive
'Shogun' could be in for an epic night, 'The Bear' could clean up for the second time in less than a year, and 'Baby Reindeer' has gone from dark horse to contender as the 76th Primetime Emmy Awards arrive on Sunday.
4 charged with manslaughter, forcible confinement in Burnaby 19-year-old's death: IHIT
More than a year after a Burnaby man was killed during a home invasion, charges have been laid against four suspects for their alleged involvement in the fatal incident.
Andrew Scheer avoids answering if Conservatives will cancel dental care program
Conservative House Leader Andrew Scheer won't say whether his party will scale back or fully scrap Canada's federal dental care program, despite new data showing nearly 650,000 Canadians have used the plan.