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Suspects caught on camera vandalizing Fort Langley rainbow crosswalk

Cameras installed last week due to repeated vandalism
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After it was vandalized, a worker with Langley Township tries to pressure wash tire marks off the rainbow crosswalk in Fort Langley. (Langley Advance Times files)

Suspects were caught on camera vandalizing the rainbow crosswalk in Fort Langley, which cost the Township $5,000 to fully restore the paint.

Last week, cameras originally sitting in storage were installed at the intersection of Glover Road and Mary Avenue. Only a few days later, their were put to use.

On Saturday morning, Sept. 9, Langley RCMP received a report about two males in an older white Ford pick up truck “intentionally burning rubber” on the rainbow crosswalk around 8:15 a.m., Langley RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Craig van Herk told the Langley Advance Times.

For the first time in the crosswalk’s history, the vehicle’s registration and its occupants were caught on camera and the video was sent to the RCMP for its investigation.

The Fort Langley rainbow crosswalk was initially installed in 2017, after a group of local artists raised half of the $12,000 needed for the installation. The other half was contributed by the Fort Langley Business Improvement Association.

Mayor Eric Woodward, who was the president of the Fort Langley BIA at the time, said the crosswalk has been consistently vandalized ever since.

“I thought, rather than keep repairing it, there was a mechanism to essentially try and catch the people doing this,” he said.

The mayor added that he’s disappointed people choose to vandalize the crosswalk regularly, but remains hopeful going forward with the cameras.

“My objective is to keep [the crosswalk] there and not have it vandalized, and hopefully we can still achieve that,” Woodward said.

The other rainbow crosswalk in Langley, located in Murrayville between RCMP headquarters and the school district offices, has no reports of vandalism since its installation in 2021.

In a post to Facebook, Woodward said the Township is also “reviewing civil remedies” to pursue the people responsible for the latest vandalism “as the law permits.”

Langley RCMP are investigating.

Rainbow crosswalks – designed to show support for the LGBTQ community – have been targeted in other communities.

At the end of August, one of Summerland’s two rainbow crosswalks was painted with anti-Black slurs.

In May, the Penticton rainbow crosswalk was vandalized with dark streaks from a vehicle’s tires just two days after it was installed.

And last year, the District of Vanderhoof installed surveillance cameras at its rainbow crosswalk due to repeated vandalism.

Crosswalks in Surrey, New Westminster, and Abbotsford have also been attacked.

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Kyler Emerson

About the Author: Kyler Emerson

I'm honoured to focus my career in the growing community of Aldergrove and work with our many local organizations.
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