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PostJan 12, 2018#7101

leeharveyawesome wrote:
Jan 12, 2018
Forgive me, but why do you have to up and move just because of a few gunshots down the street? And what neighborhood in the city are you moving to where there won't be gunshots down the street?

First off, I have to move anyways because we need more space. And my wife isn't going to let us stay in a neighborhood where there's gunshots around the corner at a children's bus stop at 7am in the morning.

There probably isn't a neighborhood in the city where you won't occasionally hear gunshots, sure. But certainly there are ones with less than others, and certainly they're usually going to be constrained to the night hours.

It's a real problem that this stuff is happening in the light of day now in areas where people are likely to be out and about.

I love the hell out of this city, and I don't plan to ever leave it. But I'm not going to apologize for being concerned about the increasingly frequently and increasingly close amount of gunfire to my home.

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PostJan 12, 2018#7102

Nice and relevant article by CityLab about how Camden reset their police department and cut murders by 3/4ths. Some cool discussion points about the value of community policing in destabilized neighborhoods. STL could take a few pointers.

https://www.citylab.com/equity/2018/01/ ... =SFTwitter

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PostJan 12, 2018#7103

GoHarvOrGoHome wrote: Nice and relevant article by CityLab about how Camden reset their police department and cut murders by 3/4ths. Some cool discussion points about the value of community policing in destabilized neighborhoods. STL could take a few pointers.

https://www.citylab.com/equity/2018/01/ ... =SFTwitter
There were actually more shootings in Camden last year but less people happened to die from their injuries, for whatever reason. Just a fluke. But if the cops want to pat themselves on the back by all means, feel free.

http://www.courierpostonline.com/story/ ... 997968001/

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PostJan 12, 2018#7104

Comparing any city to NYC is somewhat difficult, but here are some rough comparisons between us and NYC which we should consider given how dramatically NYC's crime has fallen in recent years. Murders are down from a peak of over 2,000 in the early 1990's to around 290 in 2017. To put that in perspective, here are some rough estimate figures:

NYC:
Population 8.5 million
Murders: 290
Police Officers: 37,000

STL:
Population: 315 k
Murders: 200
Police Officers: 1,300

Quick math shows that STL has about 1 officer for every 242 residents while NYC has around 1 officer for every 230 residents. This implies that maybe we could stand to add a handful of officers here, but that alone is highly unlikely to result in the dramatic reduction in murders seen in NYC. Clearly our policing strategy needs to change.

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PostJan 13, 2018#7105

Year-end neighborhood crime report out...

http://www.slmpd.org/crimestats/CRM0013-BY_201712.pdf

205 homicides in 2017, up 9% from the 188 in 2016 (and 2015). As always results vary by neighborhood but in general homicides up in North City, about the same in Central Corridor, and down in South City.

PostJan 13, 2018#7106

I see there's been an interesting convo on here but this gave me a bit of a chuckle....
whitherSTL wrote:
Jan 12, 2018
In a decade the city will have ~225K residents, will file for BK, and everything will restart...

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PostJan 13, 2018#7107

STLrainbow wrote:
Jan 13, 2018
Year-end neighborhood crime report out...

http://www.slmpd.org/crimestats/CRM0013-BY_201712.pdf

205 homicides in 2017, up 9% from the 188 in 2016 (and 2015). As always results vary by neighborhood but in general homicides up in North City, about the same in Central Corridor, and down in South City.
The overall crime numbers are pretty disappointing. Even though murders have been rising for the past few years, it seems like the total crime numbers have been dropping. However, that wasn't the case in 2017 which saw a 1.9% increase in total crime.

Aggravated assault with a gun was up 22.7% with 2,616 cases. That's a pretty staggering number. That's about 1 for every 120 people and over 7 per day.

In 2013, there were 1,626 aggravated assaults with a gun. We have had over a 60% increase in 4 years.

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PostJan 13, 2018#7108

^ yeah, as mentioned results vary greatly neighborhood to neighborhood -- see Downtown (no change) v. Downtown West (up a lot) , e.g. -- but the overall jump in shootings (and homicides) is extremely frustrating.

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PostJan 13, 2018#7109

STLrainbow wrote:
Jan 13, 2018
I see there's been an interesting convo on here but this gave me a bit of a chuckle....
whitherSTL wrote:
Jan 12, 2018
In a decade the city will have ~225K residents, will file for BK, and everything will restart...
Ha yeah I can't speak to the BK issue because I haven't taken a dive into the city financials. However, on the baseline that comment completely ignores the reality of nationwide housing trends that are starting to take hold in StL, global trends concerning urban migration, and the current boom in multi-family building taking place in the city right now. Also the slowing of net migratory outflows from the city shown by the most recent census data.

As a post above in this thread states, homicides are flat or down in the central corridor and south city which since 2010 have seen consistent rehab and new construction activity, pointing towards the potential of a no-loss census for the city overall in 2020.

But my view is shaded from growing up in the city in the 1990s and seeing the dramatic difference of investment in the city now compared to then. IMHO 2020 is the bottom for StL city population.

PostJan 13, 2018#7110

Grover wrote:
Jan 13, 2018
STLrainbow wrote:
Jan 13, 2018
Year-end neighborhood crime report out...

http://www.slmpd.org/crimestats/CRM0013-BY_201712.pdf

205 homicides in 2017, up 9% from the 188 in 2016 (and 2015). As always results vary by neighborhood but in general homicides up in North City, about the same in Central Corridor, and down in South City.
The overall crime numbers are pretty disappointing. Even though murders have been rising for the past few years, it seems like the total crime numbers have been dropping. However, that wasn't the case in 2017 which saw a 1.9% increase in total crime.

Aggravated assault with a gun was up 22.7% with 2,616 cases. That's a pretty staggering number. That's about 1 for every 120 people and over 7 per day.

In 2013, there were 1,626 aggravated assaults with a gun. We have had over a 60% increase in 4 years.
Those are horrible stats. Unfortunately in this country public health epidemics like guns are ignored for special interests. Over 25% of the people killed via gun violence in St. Louis in the entire year of 2017 were killed in 10 minutes in Las Vegas. There are many people in this country that do not value human life and as long as we continue to make the easiest way of eliminating human life as available as possible to as many as possible this is not going to change. Urban areas across the nation are held hostage by a voting minority which is literal insanity.

But, as members have said, stating the political reality does not get us any closer to a solution for our neighborhoods and homes. We need forward thinking and aggressive leadership that learns from what has worked in New York, etc as posted in this thread and applies the necessary pieces to our regional situation.

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PostJan 14, 2018#7111

^ those are two good posts.

I agree we may see some population loss this decade --, my bet is under 5% (which would keep us above 300,000 people -- and that'll be the population bottom. Crime definitely is one of many factors affecting our ability to maximize population, but its pretty silly to suggest we'll crater population over the next decade when all available evidence suggests we're seeing increasing investments in more and more neighborhoods.

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PostJan 14, 2018#7112

SouthCityJR wrote:
Jan 12, 2018
Comparing any city to NYC is somewhat difficult, but here are some rough comparisons between us and NYC which we should consider given how dramatically NYC's crime has fallen in recent years. Murders are down from a peak of over 2,000 in the early 1990's to around 290 in 2017. To put that in perspective, here are some rough estimate figures:

NYC:
Population 8.5 million
Murders: 290
Police Officers: 37,000

STL:
Population: 315 k
Murders: 200
Police Officers: 1,300

Quick math shows that STL has about 1 officer for every 242 residents while NYC has around 1 officer for every 230 residents. This implies that maybe we could stand to add a handful of officers here, but that alone is highly unlikely to result in the dramatic reduction in murders seen in NYC. Clearly our policing strategy needs to change.
I've asked this directly to aldermen/alderwomen, and will ask again here: St. Louis has one of the highest rates of police officers to residents in the country (if not the highest), so where are all these police officers??

When I lived in NYC, I constantly saw beat patrols, car patrols, etc. I lived in different neighborhoods and boroughs (Manhattan and Brooklyn), wealthier and poorer areas, and you see police everywhere. Here in St. Louis I barely see any police ever. There are no cops walking the streets anywhere, you very rarely see police vehicles just on patrol. Even Cara Spencer on a recent nextSTL post highlighted the importance of beat cops and community policing in driving down crime rates around the Cherokee area. This is a relatively well-tested method but does not seem to be a priority.

Again, where is everyone? Are they just sitting at the police station all day?

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PostJan 14, 2018#7113

kipfilet wrote: When I lived in NYC, I constantly saw beat patrols, car patrols, etc. I lived in different neighborhoods and boroughs (Manhattan and Brooklyn), wealthier and poorer areas, and you see police everywhere. Here in St. Louis I barely see any police ever.
While the per capita number of police officers in NYC and STL may be comparable, the density is not. In NYC, they have 121.7 officers per square mile, while STL is 19.6.

That stills seems like a fairly high density of police in STL. I guess you would have to divide that by 3 shifts a day, but that would still leave an average of over 6 cops per sq mile. Assume each one is partnered up, that would still have 3 cop cars/pairings per sq mile, which seems like a sufficient number.

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PostJan 14, 2018#7114

Grover wrote:
Jan 14, 2018
kipfilet wrote: When I lived in NYC, I constantly saw beat patrols, car patrols, etc. I lived in different neighborhoods and boroughs (Manhattan and Brooklyn), wealthier and poorer areas, and you see police everywhere. Here in St. Louis I barely see any police ever.
While the per capita number of police officers in NYC and STL may be comparable, the density is not. In NYC, they have 121.7 officers per square mile, while STL is 19.6.

That stills seems like a fairly high density of police in STL. I guess you would have to divide that by 3 shifts a day, but that would still leave an average of over 6 cops per sq mile. Assume each one is partnered up, that would still have 3 cop cars/pairings per sq mile, which seems like a sufficient number.
Thank you, yes. I wonder which of these is the case
a) They spend all their time in North City responding to incident calls
b) They spend all their time at stations/substations waiting for deployment calls
c) The dept is terribly mismanaged

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PostJan 15, 2018#7115

Or a combination of all three.

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PostJan 15, 2018#7116

leeharveyawesome wrote:
Jan 12, 2018
Forgive me, but why do you have to up and move just because of a few gunshots down the street? And what neighborhood in the city are you moving to where there won't be gunshots down the street?
I live in the city and there aren't gunshots down the street. I've never heard gunshots in my neighborhood, even on NYE.

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PostJan 16, 2018#7117

kipfilet wrote:
Jan 14, 2018
SouthCityJR wrote:
Jan 12, 2018
Comparing any city to NYC is somewhat difficult, but here are some rough comparisons between us and NYC which we should consider given how dramatically NYC's crime has fallen in recent years. Murders are down from a peak of over 2,000 in the early 1990's to around 290 in 2017. To put that in perspective, here are some rough estimate figures:

NYC:
Population 8.5 million
Murders: 290
Police Officers: 37,000

STL:
Population: 315 k
Murders: 200
Police Officers: 1,300

Quick math shows that STL has about 1 officer for every 242 residents while NYC has around 1 officer for every 230 residents. This implies that maybe we could stand to add a handful of officers here, but that alone is highly unlikely to result in the dramatic reduction in murders seen in NYC. Clearly our policing strategy needs to change.
I've asked this directly to aldermen/alderwomen, and will ask again here: St. Louis has one of the highest rates of police officers to residents in the country (if not the highest), so where are all these police officers??

When I lived in NYC, I constantly saw beat patrols, car patrols, etc. I lived in different neighborhoods and boroughs (Manhattan and Brooklyn), wealthier and poorer areas, and you see police everywhere. Here in St. Louis I barely see any police ever. There are no cops walking the streets anywhere, you very rarely see police vehicles just on patrol. Even Cara Spencer on a recent nextSTL post highlighted the importance of beat cops and community policing in driving down crime rates around the Cherokee area. This is a relatively well-tested method but does not seem to be a priority.

Again, where is everyone? Are they just sitting at the police station all day?
Growing up in South City I definitely recall noticing a dip in the number of squad cars patrolling our neighborhood starting maybe six or seven years ago. My neighbors always attributed it to who our alderwoman was but I don't buy that entirely.

I did, however, move Downtown last summer and was very pleasantly surprised to come across beat cops numerous times throughout the year (as recently as two weeks ago). Granted, this is just along Washington Ave and by Keiner Plaza but it still felt good to see them out and about. Now if only they could do something about the rising number of car break-ins...

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PostJan 16, 2018#7118

That's encouraging. And (definitely not coincidently) that is one of the parts of Downtown that has gotten much safer in recent years. Besides the obvious community engagement benefits, police presence on the streets is a very powerful deterrent.

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PostJan 16, 2018#7119

St. Louis' new director of public safety speaks out on black-on-black crime:

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metr ... op-story-2

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PostJan 16, 2018#7120

^ Bruce Franks did not like Jimmy Edwards' comments on TWTR. Paraphrasing, he wanted the conditions that people live in which leads to murder to be addressed.

People do realize that killing someone is considered a bad thing and is also against the law, correct? Regardless of "conditions" taking another human's life when it's not self-defense has to register in someone's conscience as bad, and unlawful.

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PostJan 16, 2018#7121

2017 STL Neighborhood Crime Stats are out. While results vary by n'hood, it's utterly depressing for north of Delmar. Of STL's 205 homicides...
North: 165 (up 26% over 2016)
Central: 14 (down 17.6%)
South: 26 (down 33.3%)

Based on 2010 Census, the 2017 homicide rate (per 100k ppl.) by corridor is roughly:
North: 165
Central: 23
South: 17

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PostJan 16, 2018#7122

whitherSTL wrote:
Jan 16, 2018
^ Bruce Franks did not like Jimmy Edwards' comments on TWTR. Paraphrasing, he wanted the conditions that people live in which leads to murder to be addressed.

People do realize that killing someone is considered a bad thing and is also against the law, correct? Regardless of "conditions" taking another human's life when it's not self-defense has to register in someone's conscience as bad, and unlawful.
This is part of the problem. Especially for this issue, there needs to a short and long-term solution. The long-term solution is exactly what Rep. Franks said and has been saying. However, waiting for these institutional changes to be implemented without doing something to prevent it in the meantime negatively impacts the communities in which these violent crimes occur. It's easy politics for either side to blame everything on the community or everything on institutional racism (although the latter is likely a large part of the issue). What is difficult and, to my knowledge, what has not been addressed, is what to do over the six months as well as over the next six years.

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PostJan 16, 2018#7123

whitherSTL wrote:
Jan 16, 2018
People do realize that killing someone is considered a bad thing and is also against the law, correct? Regardless of "conditions" taking another human's life when it's not self-defense has to register in someone's conscience as bad, and unlawful.
you can tell people to stop committing crimes until you're blue in the face, or you can work to end the conditions that drive people to commit crimes. it's not that hard to understand. as with most things, though, people here can't (or won't) see the forest for the trees.

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PostJan 16, 2018#7124

Sounds like police have little detail on the homicide on Gravois last week, but this story about the victim's past run-in and encounter with Saint Louis County Prosecutor Office corruption/lack of professionalism is pretty wild..

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crim ... 10023.html

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PostJan 22, 2018#7125

Went downtown Saturday to the Blues games, went to Wash Ave, had dinner, went to BPV had a beer and then walked to the Blues game.
We got downtown early and parked on the street in front of the Federal Courthouse. We all commented on our way home that we did not see one police officer ( the entire night and we did a lot of walking) until we got in front of Scottrade.
Honestly, we were a bit surprised and in hind sight it was a bit unnerving.

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