The Police-reported
crime statistics for 2018 from Statistics Canada are out.
The police reported crime statistics provide both the crime rates
and the crime severity index as well as more specific data on things like the
homicide rate. According to the report,
police-reported crime in Canada, as measured by both the crime rate and the
Crime Severity Index (CSI), increased for the fourth consecutive year in 2018, growing
by 2%. Despite the increase, the CSI was 17% lower in 2018 than a decade
earlier. Indeed, over the period 1998 to 2014, the crime severity index in Canada
fell rather dramatically – dropping by about 44 percent - but has now started
to rise.
The CSI increased in
two-thirds of Canada's largest census metropolitan areas in 2018, with the
largest increases in Windsor (+21%), Moncton (+15%) and St. Catharines–Niagara
(+15%). Breaking and entering was an important contributor to the increases in
Windsor and St. Catharines–Niagara, while fraud was an important contributor to
the increases in Moncton and Windsor. The largest decreases in the CSI were in
Belleville (-20%), Saguenay (-12%) and Peterborough (-10%).
The value of the CSI
was highest in Lethbridge at 137, followed by Regina at 126.6 and then Winnipeg
at 119.4. Thunder Bay ranked 8th
out of 35 on the level of crime as measured by the CSI index (See Figure 1)
while Greater Sudbury ranked 14th.
In terms of changes, Thunder Bay and Sudbury both registered an increase
in the CSI in 2018 at 9 and 5 percent respectively (See Figure 2) with Thunder
Bay reporting the 9th largest increase and Sudbury the 17th. Driving Thunder Bay’s increase in the CSI
were increases in breaking and entering; robbery; fraud; trafficking,
production and distribution of cannabis (pre-legalization); attempted murder;
and homicide. As for Sudbury, the
increase was driven by Increase in breaking and entering, and sexual assault;
and partially offset by decrease in child pornography.
So the long and short for Thunder Bay this year is that crime rates are down but the severity is high.