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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NJ: Get Crime Off Street? They See One Way
Title:US NJ: Get Crime Off Street? They See One Way
Published On:2007-12-26
Source:Philadelphia Inquirer, The (PA)
Fetched On:2008-01-11 16:07:08
GET CRIME OFF STREET? THEY SEE ONE WAY

Camden Residents Hope A Change Limits All Kinds Of Traffic.

Making his daily rounds delivering mail, Steve Carmichael walks some
of the meanest streets in Camden.

Open-air drug sales, violence, music blaring from cars - the Whitman
Park neighborhood has it all.

"It's a war out there," Carmichael said last week.

But it's also where he and his family live.

Carmichael, who returned home to Camden in 1999 after 13 years in
the military and five years in South Carolina, had to make a choice.
Should he do nothing, or should he get involved?

He got involved. In addition to being acting president of his
neighborhood association, Carmichael is a member of Camden's
District Council Collaborative Board, a liaison between the
community and the police and the city.

Thanks to a petition that Carmichael and another volunteer took door
to door, a crime-fighting initiative pushed by the board will go
into effect in about a week: Louis Street, in the heart of
Whitman Park, is going one-way for a narrow 11-block stretch from
Kaighns Avenue south to Sheridan Street.

It might not sound like much, but police and criminologists say it
could make the dangerous corridor easier for police to monitor and
more livable.

"I can't say making Louis Street one-way will be a silver bullet for
all the problems, but it is one of the things we can do," Camden
Police Capt. Al Handy said. "We constantly deal with drug crime,
violent and disorderly behavior, and loud music."

Making heavily traveled, and heavily patrolled, Louis Street one-way
should cut down on traffic and give police a better handle on who
comes and goes, Handy said.

"It's got a lot of vehicle traffic and a lot of pedestrian traffic,"
he said. "There are also no stop signs, which gives people the
ability to get up a lot of speed."

At Rutgers University-Camden, Jon'a Meyer, a professor of
criminology, said the move was a good one.

"Controlling traffic by making streets one-way or by entirely
closing them is an approach that has worked in other cities," Meyer
said. "It's especially effective against folks coming into the area
for, shall we say, illicit reasons."

It's one more tactic in deterring crime, Meyer said, like adding
lighting in dark alleys and stop signs.

Ronald V. Clarke, a Rutgers professor of criminology in Newark, also
saw merit in the Camden move.

"I can't say I know of any research that has looked at the impact of
making streets one-way, but I would say it is consistent with
closing streets, and there are quite a lot of studies that show that
is effective," he said.

The stretch of Louis Street to go one-way is a bleak, stereotypical
image of inner-city blight. Except for a mini-mart at Kaighns, it is
essentially barren of businesses. A number of houses are boarded up,
with graffiti on one reading "Death before dishonor."

"It's a hot spot when we look at crime analysis," Handy said,
echoing City Councilman Bill Spearman, who represents the Whitman
Park area as part of Ward 2.

"This is a first step toward reclaiming and revitalizing the
neighborhood," said Spearman, who added that he was excited about
the cooperation among the city, police and community.

Council approved the change to one-way after a groundswell of
community support and activism.

In 2006, the District Council Collaborative Board identified Louis
Street as a magnet for addicts in search of drugs.

Working with police, the board also determined that the street was
not wide enough for two-way traffic, resulting in more accidents
than normal. It also noted a lack of stop signs or stoplights. One
helpful step, the group decided, would be making Louis
Street one-way, a concept that found support in a
petition circulated among residents.

"There are a lot of law-abiding citizens in the neighborhood who
work hard every day and want to raise their families in a safe
environment," Handy said.

Supporters say making the street one-way and adding stop signs will
give the police something to enforce. Troublemakers will be easier
for police to spot when they have to slow down or stop. Children
headed to the park will be safer crossing the street. And fewer cars
could get sideswiped. All in the greater aim of making Louis Street
less friendly for troublemakers.

"We want to deter them from standing out there all day, every day,"
Carmichael said. "I have genuine hope, yes."
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