In 2015, Langley City Council adopted the “Community Crime Prevention Strategic Plan.” One of the action items in that plan was to call on the province to expand
the Car 67 program to our community. This program is now called the Mobile
Integrated Crisis Response program. This program pairs a police officer and a
health care professional who respond to calls when people are in mental health
distress. The goal of this program is to reduce repeated police calls for
service for the same person and instead provide people with an appropriate,
continuous health-based response.
A recommendation from Langley City’s Citizens’ Assembly
called for continued provincial advocacy as well as for piloting a Mobile
Integrated Crisis Response program in Langley. The City will continue to
advocate for provincial funding. On Monday, Council passed a motion to
include, in the 2027 budget consideration process, a one-year pilot program
for a Mobile Integrated Crisis Response team, with an effectiveness evaluation
report of the pilot. Based on the pilot's outcome, it could support a business
case for the province to provide ongoing funding for this program, as they do
in other communities.
Council also
recently endorsed Transportation 2050, Langley City’s Transportation Plan. One of the priority planning actions in
the report was to develop a Slow Streets Program for neighbourhood streets. A
Slow Streets program, among other things, includes lowering the speed limit to
30 km/h on local side streets. As such, Council passed a motion to include
developing a Slow Streets Program in the 2027 budget consideration process.
I hear from many residents about their concerns with the health system. While
the health care system, including hospitals, is a provincial responsibility,
Council has advocated on behalf of residents on matters we regularly hear
about, even if it is outside our authority to take direct action. Back in
2024, the province announced a commitment to fund 300 new long‑term care beds
at Langley Memorial Hospital. The provincial government has recently reduced
its capital projects funding in the near term, so Council passed a motion
asking me to write a letter to the province to inquire into the status of the
announced long-term care beds at Langley Memorial Hospital.