
Downtown Eastside restaurateur says he could make more dealing drugs on the street
The owner of a Downtown Eastside restaurant on a block with one of the highest crime rates in Vancouver says the irony of all the drug use, dealing and street disorder happening outside his doors is something he tries not to think about as he struggles to run a legal business.
At the same time, stakeholders are urging the provincial and federal governments to step up and play a bigger role in tackling the root cause of the area's illegal activity, which continues to thrive.
Before the Vancouver Police Department's (VPD) Task Force Barrage brought an increased police presence and foot patrols to Carrall Street near Hastings earlier this year, Calabash Bistro said co-existing with drug dealers has helped them survive for the past 15 years.
'The reality is, is that we've had to create a mutual respect between our business and all the business that happens out there,' Cullin David told Global News in an interview.
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3:11
Downtown Eastside business struggles to stay open amid rampant public disorder
'Sometimes they're the only person on the block who can deal with an addict who's literally just done their drugs but is now passed out in front of my restaurant.'
The one block radius of Carrall Street and Hastings was known as a hot spot for loitering, street vending, drug trafficking and disorder, according to Insp. Gary Hiar, the commanding officer of Task Force Barrage.
Area crime, Hiar said, has decreased since the dedicated police task force began targeting violent offenders and organized criminals on Feb. 13.
Statistics provided by the VPD show violent incidents on the block are down 30 per cent from 137 in the period between Feb. 13 and June 15 in 2024 to 96 over the same four months this year.
Common assaults have decreased by 40 per cent from 62 in 2024 to 37 this year, serious assaults are down 21 per cent from 34 to 27, robberies have been reduced 62 per cent from 13 to five this year and commercial break and enters are down 75 per cent from eight in 2024 to two in the same four months this year.
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'Looking at numbers is one thing, but if the perception is still that it's not safe, then we need to do more,' said Hiar, the commanding officer of Task Force Barrage.
While he appreciates the extra police presence, David said it has also introduced new crews to the block, who are trying to take over as existing criminal networks are disrupted.
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'We're always prepared, that you know, that squeeze on the core of the Downtown Eastside could lead to some disruption or some displacement, I should say,' Hiar responded.
1:54
New security cameras for Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
In terms of shifting crime elsewhere, Hiar believes police are keeping a handle on it with additional resources on the outskirts of the area.
Early Sunday morning, David said his cooks had a close call when dealers from the 'night shift,' who he said are often armed, drunk or high and much more dangerous than their counterparts on the day shift, attempted to stash something in Calabash's commissary after spotting police on patrol.
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The tense confrontation that ensued between his staff and approximately 10 aggressive individuals was only defused, said David, when a dealer they know intervened.
'First and foremost, if those types of tensions exist, we need to be called, we need to know because we have the patrols in and around the area, and we're going to respond,' Hiar told Global News on Tuesday.
Terry Yung, B.C.'s Minister of State for Community Safety and a former VPD officer who walked the beat in the Downtown Eastside for more than four years, said targeted enforcement of the area's criminal activity will continue, as well as addressing street conditions in the Carrall Street laneway between Hastings and Pender Streets.
'I understand the challenges and sometimes the fear of coming down here,' Yung told Global News in an interview. 'That's the reason I go to work in the morning and do this, because I do believe we can make a difference. Maybe not overnight to solve all the issues that we face, but we can make incremental progress.'
The Hastings Crossing Business Improvement Association said it is supporting David and other businesses as much as it can with safety and security.
'No business owner should have to risk their life to keep their business open,' executive director Landon Hoyt said in an interview. 'What (David is) facing and what his staff are facing is extreme and something we've never seen before.'
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0:39
Task Force Barrage sees dip in DTES crime, Vancouver police say
Hoyt said the province promised investment and change in the years preceding the 2010 Olympic Winter Games, noting Carrall Street was celebrated as one of the city of Vancouver's first separated bike paths, but said the community has since been neglected.
'This neighbourhood has not gotten what it deserves,' Hoyt told Global News. 'It's just resulted in abandonment, really, and a crumbling neighbourhood.'
Hoyt said his local BIA can only do so much but has advocated relentlessly for the government to address the service gaps in the Downtown Eastside, including through a new Vancouver Agreement.
'Something that actually lays out and defines clear levels of responsibility for all different levels of government. That's something that would lead to change in this community,' said Hoyt.
Signed in March 2000, the initial Vancouver Agreement was a five-year collaboration involving the federal, provincial and municipal governments. It focused on three main areas: community health and safety, economic and social development, and community capacity building.
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According to a B.C. government press release, Vancouver Agreement partners announced more than $2.8 million on Jan. 21, 2003, for new programs aimed at revitalizing the Downtown Eastside economically and socially.
3:18
Retiring VPD chief reflects on policing the Downtown Eastside
In April 2005, all three levels of government announced that the Vancouver Agreement would be renewed for a second five-year term lasting until March 2010.
'The Agreement's first focus is the revitalization of the city's Downtown Eastside, particularly encouraging local business attraction and retention, secure and safe housing, and support for residents with addiction and mental health issues,' stated an April 4, 2005, news release on its renewal.
The Vancouver Agreement was not renewed after it expired in 2010, and the city of Vancouver confirmed there is currently no similar framework in place.
Green Party Coun. Pete Fry said we are not meeting the root causes of problems in the area, and agreed the Vancouver Agreement approach needs to be revisited so all levels of government are brought in to look for proactive solutions.
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'How do we knit together federal policy, provincial policy, civic bylaws, policing, all those pieces?' Fry told Global News in an interview. 'We need to get everybody at the same table and figure out what are some of the tangible solutions because what's happening right now isn't working.'
'It makes me wonder what the heck I'm doing down here,' said David.
The bistro owner told Global News it would probably be safer selling drugs on Carrall Street than trying to run a restaurant, adding he and his staff have turned down offers of $500 a day to work the block.
'To know that's the amount of money that can be made for standing on a corner while my business is failing, is so incredibly heartbreaking,' said David.

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Global News
7 hours ago
- Global News
Downtown Eastside restaurateur says he could make more dealing drugs on the street
The owner of a Downtown Eastside restaurant on a block with one of the highest crime rates in Vancouver says the irony of all the drug use, dealing and street disorder happening outside his doors is something he tries not to think about as he struggles to run a legal business. At the same time, stakeholders are urging the provincial and federal governments to step up and play a bigger role in tackling the root cause of the area's illegal activity, which continues to thrive. Before the Vancouver Police Department's (VPD) Task Force Barrage brought an increased police presence and foot patrols to Carrall Street near Hastings earlier this year, Calabash Bistro said co-existing with drug dealers has helped them survive for the past 15 years. 'The reality is, is that we've had to create a mutual respect between our business and all the business that happens out there,' Cullin David told Global News in an interview. Story continues below advertisement 3:11 Downtown Eastside business struggles to stay open amid rampant public disorder 'Sometimes they're the only person on the block who can deal with an addict who's literally just done their drugs but is now passed out in front of my restaurant.' The one block radius of Carrall Street and Hastings was known as a hot spot for loitering, street vending, drug trafficking and disorder, according to Insp. Gary Hiar, the commanding officer of Task Force Barrage. Area crime, Hiar said, has decreased since the dedicated police task force began targeting violent offenders and organized criminals on Feb. 13. Statistics provided by the VPD show violent incidents on the block are down 30 per cent from 137 in the period between Feb. 13 and June 15 in 2024 to 96 over the same four months this year. Common assaults have decreased by 40 per cent from 62 in 2024 to 37 this year, serious assaults are down 21 per cent from 34 to 27, robberies have been reduced 62 per cent from 13 to five this year and commercial break and enters are down 75 per cent from eight in 2024 to two in the same four months this year. Story continues below advertisement 'Looking at numbers is one thing, but if the perception is still that it's not safe, then we need to do more,' said Hiar, the commanding officer of Task Force Barrage. While he appreciates the extra police presence, David said it has also introduced new crews to the block, who are trying to take over as existing criminal networks are disrupted. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'We're always prepared, that you know, that squeeze on the core of the Downtown Eastside could lead to some disruption or some displacement, I should say,' Hiar responded. 1:54 New security cameras for Vancouver's Downtown Eastside In terms of shifting crime elsewhere, Hiar believes police are keeping a handle on it with additional resources on the outskirts of the area. Early Sunday morning, David said his cooks had a close call when dealers from the 'night shift,' who he said are often armed, drunk or high and much more dangerous than their counterparts on the day shift, attempted to stash something in Calabash's commissary after spotting police on patrol. Story continues below advertisement The tense confrontation that ensued between his staff and approximately 10 aggressive individuals was only defused, said David, when a dealer they know intervened. 'First and foremost, if those types of tensions exist, we need to be called, we need to know because we have the patrols in and around the area, and we're going to respond,' Hiar told Global News on Tuesday. Terry Yung, B.C.'s Minister of State for Community Safety and a former VPD officer who walked the beat in the Downtown Eastside for more than four years, said targeted enforcement of the area's criminal activity will continue, as well as addressing street conditions in the Carrall Street laneway between Hastings and Pender Streets. 'I understand the challenges and sometimes the fear of coming down here,' Yung told Global News in an interview. 'That's the reason I go to work in the morning and do this, because I do believe we can make a difference. Maybe not overnight to solve all the issues that we face, but we can make incremental progress.' The Hastings Crossing Business Improvement Association said it is supporting David and other businesses as much as it can with safety and security. 'No business owner should have to risk their life to keep their business open,' executive director Landon Hoyt said in an interview. 'What (David is) facing and what his staff are facing is extreme and something we've never seen before.' Story continues below advertisement 0:39 Task Force Barrage sees dip in DTES crime, Vancouver police say Hoyt said the province promised investment and change in the years preceding the 2010 Olympic Winter Games, noting Carrall Street was celebrated as one of the city of Vancouver's first separated bike paths, but said the community has since been neglected. 'This neighbourhood has not gotten what it deserves,' Hoyt told Global News. 'It's just resulted in abandonment, really, and a crumbling neighbourhood.' Hoyt said his local BIA can only do so much but has advocated relentlessly for the government to address the service gaps in the Downtown Eastside, including through a new Vancouver Agreement. 'Something that actually lays out and defines clear levels of responsibility for all different levels of government. That's something that would lead to change in this community,' said Hoyt. Signed in March 2000, the initial Vancouver Agreement was a five-year collaboration involving the federal, provincial and municipal governments. It focused on three main areas: community health and safety, economic and social development, and community capacity building. Story continues below advertisement According to a B.C. government press release, Vancouver Agreement partners announced more than $2.8 million on Jan. 21, 2003, for new programs aimed at revitalizing the Downtown Eastside economically and socially. 3:18 Retiring VPD chief reflects on policing the Downtown Eastside In April 2005, all three levels of government announced that the Vancouver Agreement would be renewed for a second five-year term lasting until March 2010. 'The Agreement's first focus is the revitalization of the city's Downtown Eastside, particularly encouraging local business attraction and retention, secure and safe housing, and support for residents with addiction and mental health issues,' stated an April 4, 2005, news release on its renewal. The Vancouver Agreement was not renewed after it expired in 2010, and the city of Vancouver confirmed there is currently no similar framework in place. Green Party Coun. Pete Fry said we are not meeting the root causes of problems in the area, and agreed the Vancouver Agreement approach needs to be revisited so all levels of government are brought in to look for proactive solutions. Story continues below advertisement 'How do we knit together federal policy, provincial policy, civic bylaws, policing, all those pieces?' Fry told Global News in an interview. 'We need to get everybody at the same table and figure out what are some of the tangible solutions because what's happening right now isn't working.' 'It makes me wonder what the heck I'm doing down here,' said David. The bistro owner told Global News it would probably be safer selling drugs on Carrall Street than trying to run a restaurant, adding he and his staff have turned down offers of $500 a day to work the block. 'To know that's the amount of money that can be made for standing on a corner while my business is failing, is so incredibly heartbreaking,' said David.


Global News
9 hours ago
- Global News
FBI director again blames Vancouver for fentanyl crisis, but U.S. data says otherwise
Canadian law enforcement continues to dispute claims from the U.S. administration about how much fentanyl is being smuggled across the border. It follows the latest allegation by the head of the FBI who specifically mentions Vancouver as the source of the problem. In a recent appearance with podcaster Joe Rogan, FBI Director Kash Patel once again blamed Vancouver for its role in the fentanyl crisis. 'They're flying it into Vancouver, they're taking the precursors to Canada, manufacturing up there, and doing their global distribution routes up there because we've been so effective down south,' Patel told Rogan. He also said that stricter enforcement at the Mexican border has resulted in cartels increasingly using Canada as a northern entry point for fentanyl. However, David Teboul, Assistant Commander of the RCMP, Pacific region, said the assertion that Canada is exporting fentanyl in 'significant quantities into the U.S. is not accurate.' Story continues below advertisement 'It is certainly not reflected by Canadian law enforcement agencies' data, nor is it corroborated either by U. S. agencies, from the DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration), to the CBP (Customs and Border Protection), to all the partner agencies that we have very good relationships with,' Teboul said. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'They also don't corroborate that. It's been stated many times.' He did agree that most precursors are coming from China into Canada, but did not agree with the rest of Patel's statement. 2:10 Trump's FBI head criticizes Canadian drug enforcement Data from the U.S. provided to Global News also showed that in the 2024 fiscal year, more than 18,000 pounds of fentanyl were seized at the U.S.-Mexico border. At the Canada-U.S. border, just over 10 pounds of fentanyl was seized in 2024. Story continues below advertisement So far this year, more than seven pounds of fentanyl from Mexico was confiscated and just over one pound from Canada. However, one organized crime expert said it is critical not to be distracted by the data. 'The drugs themselves don't move by themselves, don't get produced by themselves,' Calvin Chrustie, a senior partner and critical risk consultant with the Critical Risk Team said. 'So let's have the serious conversation about who are the threat actors, i.e., the criminal organizations. What type of support and enabling do they get from foreign states?' Chrustie said that B.C. has long been a convergence zone for organized crime groups and Vancouver is a popular choice due to its marine access. 'I don't think we should be listening to, and I never have, you know, in my career, post my career, to what the political assessment was, because I found it, you know, whether it was south of the border, north of the border, not the most informed historically, this whole issue got politicized,' he added. 'I don't think you know in terms of calculating the threat and calculating the severity of the problem, how much goes across a border.' Teboul said B.C. has a coordinated approach to drug trafficking and has had many successes getting drugs off the streets. Story continues below advertisement 'British Columbia is also in a particular predicament, of course, with our very vast, beautiful ocean, but it's permeable, of course, into the coast of British Columbia, and we need to dedicate some resources and investments at all three levels of government to secure our ports as well,' he added.


Global News
9 hours ago
- Global News
Woman checking van struck and killed by semi on Whitemud Drive, child survives
A woman who got out of her vehicle on Whitemud Drive was hit and killed in south Edmonton on Tuesday afternoon. The crash happened on the eastbound lanes near the 111 Street overpass, around 1:30 p.m. The Edmonton Police Service said a white minivan was stopped on the shoulder of Whitemud Drive, near the exit. The woman driving the van had gotten out to check something when a semi truck travelling east struck her. It's not known what the woman was checking on the van. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy EMS and police responded to the collision, but the woman was declared dead on scene. The backside of the van was also struck during the collision, and the semi ended up on the grassy overpass embankment to the east. Story continues below advertisement Police said a young child was inside the van and while not physically injured, was taken to the Stollery Children's Hospital. The collision shut down a stretch of the freeway eastbound between 119 and 111 streets as the major collision section investigated, leading to afternoon commuter traffic backing up to 156 Street in the west end.