Wish our alderman would do what Kansas City is doing.
https://www.kshb.com/news/local-news/ka ... n-the-city
https://www.kshb.com/news/local-news/ka ... n-the-city
That’s assuming it actually gets enforced. It already isn’t legal and isn’t stopping them.southcitygent wrote: ↑May 29, 2021Wish our alderman would do what Kansas City is doing.
https://www.kshb.com/news/local-news/ka ... n-the-city
You know, my first car was a '67 Mustang. I still managed not to ever once do a burnout, attend a street race, or cause an accident. (I did get tagged in a parking lot once, but his insurance paid for the damage no questions asked, so that probably tells you all you need to know.) Cars don't drive stupid. People drive stupid.dweebe wrote: ↑May 29, 2021I say we just make all Dodge Challengers, Ford Mustangs and Chevy Camaros completely illegal in a zone that’s Choteau, Grand, Cass and the river. Doesn’t matter how you are driving, the time of day or even if you have the base engine. Drive one of those cars in the zone and its automatic $100 ticket.
(I’m joking. Well maybe not totally.)
Or make it a fee like the London "congestion charge." With the one hitch that people would have to enforce it. Camera enforcement works, mind. Save that we threw it out.jambo wrote: ↑May 30, 2021^^Downtown as an EV only zone.
https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 3e360.htmlChesterfield-based Larson Capital Management opened an office at 100 North Broadway, three blocks from Ballpark Village, this year. This past week, the private equity firm hired two employees from Illinois who wouldn’t have applied if not for the downtown office, said partner and CEO Paul Larson.
Larson’s company bought the building last year and is investing $15 million into it because of the opportunity Larson saw in downtown.
“You have to have a bigger view of the St. Louis region and understand that without a healthy city, eventually the county stagnates,” Larson said.
The majority of his nearly 200 employees have chosen to work downtown — his firm covers the cost of parking and the city’s 1% earnings tax, and also offers perks like free food and sporting tickets.
I'm not sure it's that simple. I suppose what it would take to end violent crime downtown would be a good amount of police walking the beat 24/7 and going the extra mile to do good police work with their hearts in the right place.framer wrote: ↑May 30, 2021As long as the powers-that-be lack the political courage to enforce existing laws and regulations, nothing will change.
2017-2019- Washington and 19thbwcrow1s wrote: ↑May 31, 2021How many folks do we have on here that actually live Downtown? I would wager their opinions hold a little more water.
Honestly, I'd love to hear more from folks who are actually living the day to day. I'm just south of Downtown. It's fun to play the urban planning game on how to fix the issues, but at some point a lot of us are just getting the watered down, sometimes-sensational reporting and playing along with idealist notions of what can happen to the urbanity of the region's welcome mat.
I talked to the writer of that about the June 2020 assault stat. If you look at May and July of the same year, clearly June is an outliner, why? Bc police arrest bunch of people on Assault/other during the Floyd protests. That context is important, will they explain it? Doubt it but they did add a line about the protests but never really explained the correlationquincunx wrote: ↑May 31, 2021Stltoday - After difficult, violent summer of 2020, downtown St. Louis at a crossroads
https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 0af2f.html
That is important context. Incidentally, I've lived downtown for 5 years now, and the only time it's ever felt truly unsafe was exactly a year ago during the riot. (To be clear, that's not commentary on the BLM movement, especially since many of the worst offenders I saw looked like they had no affiliation whatsoever with the earlier protests).dbInSouthCity wrote: ↑May 31, 2021I talked to the writer of that about the June 2020 assault stat. If you look at May and July of the same year, clearly June is an outliner, why? Bc police arrest bunch of people on Assault/other during the Floyd protests. That context is important, will they explain it? Doubt it but they did add a line about the protests but never really explained the correlationquincunx wrote: ↑May 31, 2021Stltoday - After difficult, violent summer of 2020, downtown St. Louis at a crossroads
https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 0af2f.html
Agreed on the media coverage. Although, it feels like anything happening within a five mile radius inspires the local news to include Downtown somewhere in the title. That's an exaggeration, but I am unsure why incidents that happen north of Cass Ave are considered "near Downtown" in stories written by KMOV and KSDK. Surely there is enough occurring in Downtown (like the article from last night) that we don't need to also mention crimes that happened miles from Downtown.OnTheEdge wrote: ↑Jun 01, 2021I lived downtown from 2008 to 2015. Some random violence against seemingly innocent bystanders happened from time-to-time but nothing really regular. I only recall waking to what were clearly gunshots once - a rolling gun battle that went many blocks down Olive at early morning hours and was witnessed by numerous individuals (probably the biggest Nextdoor thread I'd seen when living down there).
I didn't really leave b/c of the crime, I love the city and downtown's potential and even considered buying downtown in Fall of 2018 and then the police behavior of Stockley protesters happened and yeah, that kept me from committing.
Since then my current stance is pretty much that I'm done living anywhere where gunfire is happening on any sort of regular basis. I know the chances are pretty slim that'd me or visiting friends/family would be a victim of random violence, a reckless driving incident or catch a bullet not intended for me, but why take the chance? For whatever reason, it just doesn't make sense anymore to live where stuff like that is happening.
BTW, yes, I'm sure KMOV is highly click motivated and people love to read the sky is falling, but regardless, stuff like this, that happened just last night, is happening in the heart of downtown way too much:
https://www.kmov.com/news/women-crash-c ... 966fa.html