Bring back the graffiti officer, and other proposals from new group

A new citywide group has formed to try to get the city’s public-safety plans aligned with community priorities. The group is called Community Leaders for Public Safety, and one of its founding members, West Seattle’s Pete Spalding, shared its proposal with WSB. On the list – a strategy to fight graffiti vandalism, including bringing back the Seattle Police graffiti detective position.Here’s the full list of the CLPS priorities – remember, these are citywide, but many are certainly applicable to West Seattle:

Seattle Public Safety Initiative

Facilities
* Find a suitable alternative for Rainier Beach Community Center during the two-year closure, such as Rainier Beach High School, with a seamless transition to ensure continuity for critical programs.
* Fund the North Precinct facility. If existing building cannot be fixed, the precinct should move to a site like the Seattle School District facility on Wilson and Pacific. Parking for employees and the public must factor into the decision.
* Re-examine neighborhood substations and drop-in centers.

Community Policing
* Prioritize community policing in training programs and best police practices.
* Develop neighborhood engagement strategies so officers understand a place and its people. Reimplement Neighborhood Action Teams. Ensure that the City’s neighborhood plans reflect public safety principles, and that the City of Seattle honors the neighborhood plans.
* Fund current Crime Prevention Coordinator and Park Ranger programs, and re-examine using Community Safety Officers.

Community Programs
* Youth Initiatives: Build on current programs, with community-based advisory panels, emphasizing a long-term generational model. Support activities at playfields, schools, and community centers. Seek corporate funding and partnerships.
* Nightlife Initiative: Prioritize a socially responsible, vibrant nightlife, with clubs funding solutions to problems that originate in clubs.
* Public Alcoholism: Support successful models to house chronic street inebriates. Working with the Washington State Liquor Control Board, create an Alcohol Impact Area for Beacon Hill.
* Gangs and Graffiti: Implement a city-wide strategy to address gang-related crime, including prostitution, and a coordinated graffiti plan that reinstates the SPD graffiti detective.
* Social Services: Distribute facilities equitably throughout Seattle, with a moratorium on subsidized housing for neighborhoods that have reached capacity.

Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED)
* Apply CPTED principles in public playfields, parks, and other green spaces, and to DPD building permits, neighborhood zoning, and landscape decisions, and the Urban Forest Management Plan.
* Work with the Washington State Department of Transportation to incorporate CPTED principles into state road development and maintenance projects.

Cooperation
* Leverage existing assets and interagency taskforces to address specific issues, and establish a public safety adviser in the Mayor’s office to lead interagency coordination and policy development.
* Schedule SDOT projects to allow for public safety response and more efficient emergency access.
* Fund programs that use Washington State DOC work crews and Seattle Community Court and Pretrial Diversion service workers, to support street cleanups, environmental restoration, vacant lot mitigation, playfield safety, and graffiti removal.

Policy
* Enforce the no trespassing ordinance, nuisance housing ordinance, and encampment protocols.
* Ensure citizen oversight, a comment period for proposed policy changes, and public notice of meetings by committees working on public safety-related policies.
* Establish a quarterly meeting between the Mayor and Community Leaders for Public Safety

Spalding says many of the founding members are from Precinct Advisory Councils (he chairs the one for West Seattle’s Southwest Precinct) or crime-prevention groups. They’ve already sent this proposal to Mayor McGinn, CIty Council members, City Attorney Pete Holmes, and Police Chief John Diaz; the cover letter, which you can see here, summarizes, “We believe the return on investment in community programs – that address the needs of youth, that counter gangs and graffiti, that encourage service and safe housing for homeless people and others at risk – will make a sustainable difference in the quality of life for all Seattle residents.” We’ll keep you updated on where this goes from here.

7 Replies to "Bring back the graffiti officer, and other proposals from new group"

  • Gabe October 27, 2010 (4:37 pm)

    Is it really reasonable to hire a new graffiti “detective” when we’re cutting salaries and positions across the board? Is graffiti that much of an issue? The audit on the issue would say no.

  • Pete October 27, 2010 (8:41 pm)

    Gabe, look at the details in the city budget and see how much the city of Seattle is presently spending to combat graffiti….woudl you be surpised to learn it is over 1 million dollars a year? Now can you still say it is not much of an issue?

  • Gabe October 29, 2010 (11:44 am)

    It’s actually closer to 2 million. A figure that is farrrr too high. Just because we spend money on something doesn’t make it justified. Our spending is already disproportionate to public opinion and adding a graffiti detective would only exacerbate the difference.

  • Pete October 29, 2010 (4:28 pm)

    so what do you think the answer to this problem is then….do nothing? Or go down the same path that is obviously not working?

  • Gabe October 30, 2010 (12:07 pm)

    Why is it “obviously not working”?

    I would introduce a number of free walls throughout the city. Reallocate some of the money spent on clean up on school art programs and community center art problems. I would stop cleaning up graffiti along traintracks, under freeways, etc. where the large majority of people will never see them.

    What do you think we should do?

  • catch22 November 3, 2010 (6:49 pm)

    There is only one Seattle employee who can really help to break the gang/graffiti connection in our fair city, the graffiti detective. Gangs communicate with hand gestures and graffiti, and an understanding of their messages is essential if we hope to diminish their influence on our youth and young adults. Getting rid of this one individual demonstrates that we are extremely shortsighted and aren’t really concerned about gang activity.
    Think about this!

  • Alex November 3, 2010 (11:51 pm)

    Not a single thing on this list makes me feel any more “safe.” In fact, many of these ideas make me feel decidedly unsafe. We don’t need more police. The one thing that might actually have an impct on people’s lives would be more social services, but this actually calls for a redistribtution of social services (read: NIMBY) not the creation of any new ones.

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