A Saturday evening forum focused on Calgary Transit safety will allow the public to share concerns directly with police and one city councillor. Read More
The event comes days after a woman was shoved into a transit shelter downtown by an unknown man
The event comes days after a woman was shoved into a transit shelter downtown by an unknown man

Article content
A Saturday evening forum focused on Calgary Transit safety will allow the public to share concerns directly with police and one city councillor.
Article content
Article content
Ward 5 Coun. Raj Dhaliwal organized the event, in part due to community “uproar” after a woman was grabbed, shaken aggressively and shoved at the City Hall CTrain station several days ago.
Article content
Several people were on the platform nearby as the suspect let go of the woman and stormed off. The suspect was caught about 25 minutes later in East Village.
Article content
Story continues below
Article content
A video of the incident circulated online, and the Calgary Police Service charged Braydon Joseph James French, 31, of Calgary with attempted robbery.
Article content
Article content
The ordeal led to questions from the community, Dhaliwal told Postmedia on Saturday.
Article content
“How can you feel safe? What is happening … if it could happen (at) city hall right in front of the municipal government is, what is the city doing? What is CPS doing?” asked Dhaliwal.
Article content
The forum, set for 5 to 7 p.m. at the Genesis Centre in the city’s northeast, is meant to answer those questions and more.
Article content
Dhaliwal said it’s about “having everybody there to provide answers, clarifications, education.”
Article content
“These things do happen, unfortunately, but lawmakers are aware of this. We are working hard, law enforcement agencies are working hard,” said Dhaliwal.
Article content

Article content
Over the course of about a month beginning Feb. 17, CPS, bylaw and Transit Public Safety laid 230 charges, fulfilled 1,464 arrest warrants and issued 1,060 tickets as part of a joint operation.
Article content
Story continues below
Article content
Dubbed Safer Calgary, the program aims to curb crime and social disorder in public spaces, including on and around transit hubs.
Article content
“Downtown safety is very, very critical and vital to transit safety perception … because downtown is built around LRT,” said Dhaliwal.
Article content
Transit safety, particularly on CTrains, was cited as the top fear by 17 per cent of respondents to a survey conducted for CPS from May to July last year.
Article content
However, violent crime as a primary concern fell from 23 per cent in 2022 to 16 per cent in 2024 according to the same survey — which was conducted by phone by Illumina Research Partners, interviewing 1,000 people.
Article content
With Calgary’s municipal election set for October, Dhaliwal doesn’t see transit safety going away as an issue for voters.
Article content
The focus should be on getting to a point where “every Calgarian (can) feel that transit is safe,” he said.
Article content
Dhaliwal is expected to run for re-election in Ward 5.
Article content
“I think there’s (a lot) of work to be done still, and I just don’t want to leave it halfway and not fulfill my commitment to the residents,” said Dhaliwal.
Article content
Article content
Discover more from World Byte News
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.


