Statistics Canada has introduced a new measure of police-reported crime, the crime severity index, in which more serious crimes are weighted more heavily, by comparison with the usual crime rate in which all crimes affect the outcome equally. The Daily has a summary of the current index data and the chart reproduced below. For a detailed description of how the index is calculated see "Measuring Crime in Canada: Introducing the Crime Severity Index and Improvements to the Uniform Crime Reporting Survey."

Simon Fodden is the founder of Slaw. He taught law at Osgoode Hall Law School for more than 30 years before he retired to focus on writing, publishing, and IT and law.
[click on the author's name for more information]

up

5 Comments on “StatsCan's Crime Severity Index”

  1. While I haven't yet performed a full-scale in-depth review of the dizzying array of statistics that can be mined in this fascinating report, one key fact becomes clear very quickly — crime is going down.

    This of course runs contrary to every telecast, newspaper article, and press release that we are bombarded with in our daily lives but the fact remains that whatever way you spin the numbers, we are living in a less crime-ridden society today than we were 10 years ago.

    The new weighted format of the index even accounts for fluctuations in minor versus major crimes putting the lie to the claim that, while "crime as a whole" is down, "serious crime" is up. In fact, the survey demonstrates that serious violent crime is modestly down from last decade (though the decline is not as pronounced as the more general crime index).

    The survey also busts the generally held Canadian myth that Toronto is a frontier badland where gun-toting criminals walk the malls with impunity. In fact, amongst major Canadian metropolitan centres, Toronto comes in behind Montreal and "champion" Vancouver when it comes to serious crime, and Toronto's serious crime rate falls markedly below the national average.

    All food for thought the next time police demand new sweeping investigative powers and new recruits or politicians fulminate about the need to "get tough on crime".

  2. rob says:

    I believe the Conservative crackdown on crime is misguided, with more mandatory minimums and longer sentences, but you need to be cautious about what you infer from the crime severity index. It suffers the same weakness as traditional crime stats. It is based only on police-reported crimes, and we know that most crimes are never reported to police (9 out of 10 sex assaults are never reported). Does it really tell us that crime is down, or does it simply tell us that in some communities, reporting of serious crime is low, and in some, much lower than others?

  3. \The new weighted format of the index even accounts for fluctuations in minor versus major crimes putting the lie to the claim that, while “crime as a whole” is down, “serious crime” is up. In fact, the survey demonstrates that serious violent crime is modestly down from last decade…\

    The survey shows no such thing. As Table 1.2 of the report indicates (see here), the violent crime rate is down 0.2% and the violent crime severity index is down 1.5% – but that's just a statistical blip, since if the report had been published a year earlier, it would have shown that both the violent crime rate and the violent crime severity index were higher than at the beginning of the decade. The violent crime severity index is largely unchanged over the decade (see here). But even to point out such obvious facts is to miss the larger point: the violent crime rate in Canada is more than quadruple what it was when StatsCan began keeping comprehensive figures in the early 1960s (see here). Are we \living in a less crime-ridden society today than we were 10 years ago\? Possibly, depending on how you choose to spin the numbers and what definitions of \crime\ you want to use. But we are also, regardless of how you choose to manipulate the numbers, and regardless of what definitions you want to use, living in a society which is vastly more ridden with violent crime than it was 20, 30, 40 or 50 years ago.

  4. Simon Fodden says:

    Bob is right. There's a decent graph in a 2005 Juristat release [pdf] that shows the trends:

    The Juristat article is good on the data and on the problematic aspects of crime stats.

  5. Thanks, Simon, for providing that link. However, due to the scale of the Juristat graph, it doesn't properly convey the magnitude of the increase in violent crime rates. I think the second StatsCan graph, headed \Violent crime rate, 1962 to 2007\, at this source is of assistance (source here, for some reason Slaw keeps translating quote marks in my comments as backslashes, which corrupts the hyperlink – anyone interested in viewing the graph should click on the link and then delete the final backslash from their address bar – or just go to the StatsCan Daily for July 17, 2008).

SlawTips      

SlawTips Open Access Journals
Wednesday, February 8

There is good leagal content that doesn’t necessarily come in the neat packages that we usually look in.  Though our commercial legal database subscriptions have linked, vetted, edited, and easily. […] »»

Research

SlawTips Use join.me to Get on the Same Page Across the Web
Wednesday, February 8

When you need to collaborate on a document displayed on your screen, it’s great to have a colleague from down the hall come into your office and look over your … »»

Technology

SlawTips Top 10 Financial Errors: #8 Always Assume More Risk Than Needed
Friday, February 3

You should assess whether you can accept the financial risks associated with taking the matter, just as clients will assess whether they can (and will) pay your fee. Spend time at the beginning of the. […] »»

Practice

noted on Slaw    

MLB Selected Case Summaries    

These summaries of selected recent cases are provided each week to Slaw by Maritime Law Book.
More information.

  • Banks and Banking - Liability of banks to third parties - Negligence - General

    The plaintiffs were the former shareholders of a company that failed. They sued the defendant bank alleging that it breached its contract with the company and the plaintiffs and breached a duty ...

  • Actions - Cause of action - General principles - New or extended cause of action - Opening of floodgates

    The plaintiff and defendant worked at different branches of the same bank. The defendant’s common-law husband was the plaintiff’s ex-husband. Over a four year period, the defendant ...

  • Aliens - Definitions and general principles - Immigration consultants

    The Canadian Society of Immigration Consultants (CSIC) had been designated as the sole regulatory body of immigration consultants in Canada from 2004 until June 2011. On June 30, 2011, Bill C-35 came into force, which significantly amended ...

  • Criminal Law - Sexual offences, public morals and disorderly conduct - Public morals - Obscenity - Possession of child pornography

    The accused was convicted of making child pornography available and two counts of possession of child pornography (see [2010] Sask.R. Uned. 197). Subsequently, he was sentenced ...

  • Criminal Law - Procedure - Charge or directions - Jury or judge alone - Directions regarding pleas or evidence of witnesses, co-accused and accomplices

    Rowe was convicted by a jury of five offences. He appealed.

    The Ontario Court of Appeal allowed ...

  • Narcotic Control - Offences - Possession - General

    The accused wished to access marijuana for medicinal purposes but did not have an authorization to possess marijuana issued under the Marihuana Medical Access Regulations. He was notified that a package of marihuana addressed to him had been ...

  • Narcotic Control - General - Legislation - Exemptions - Medicinal marijuana

    McCrady, who had an application pending under the Marihuana Medical Access Regulations (MMAR) to possess and grow marijuana, was convicted of possession of marijuana (Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA), s. 4(1)). Hearn pleaded guilty ...

  • Criminal Law - Sentence - Trafficking in hashish or marijuana (incl. possession for purposes of trafficking)

    The accused pleaded guilty to one count of possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking. He was sentenced to 30 days’ imprisonment to be served intermittently and 11 months’ ...

  • Municipal Law - Powers of municipalities - Particular powers - Imposition and collection of taxes or fees 

    Catalyst Paper Corp. operated a paper mill in the District of North Cowichan. Catalyst objected to the tax rate that it paid compared to residential ratepayers. In 2009, the ...


law foundation icon

The re-development
of Slaw is assisted by
a grant from the
Law Foundation of Ontario

TalkLaw/ParLoi    

This is a listing of a few upcoming events in Canada of interest to lawyers, law students, legal librarians, and others involved in the practice of law.

Clicking on any event in the list below will give you access to more information and to links allowing you to see the full entry and to add the event to your own calendar.

Click this link for a fuller version of the TalkLaw/ParLoi calendar of events and for instructions as to how to add events and calendars to your own calendar.

Switch to our mobile site