Pubdate: Thu, 05 Jan 2006
Source: News Tribune, The (Tacoma, WA)
Copyright: 2006 Tacoma News Inc.
Contact:  http://www.thenewstribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/442
Author: Kris Sherman; The News Tribune

IOWA PROGRAM NOW WILL TAKE ON TACOMA'S STREETS

Drugs, prostitution, burglaries and other crimes ruled the River Bend 
area of Des Moines, Iowa, for years.

And then the Neighborhood Based Service Delivery program came to town.

"We went from having drug dealers on three of four corners to the 
point where you never see them," said Roger Thompson, president of 
the River Bend Neighborhood Association. "Now my neighborhood is 
incredibly safe."

The partnership among police officers, firefighters, city code 
enforcers and residents "is the best thing that ever hit the City of 
Des Moines," Thompson said.

Can it be replicated two time zones and 1,800 miles away?

Not exactly, said Tacoma City Manager Eric Anderson, who crafted Des 
Moines' program when he led that city. Every city and its 
neighborhoods have differing problems, divergent priorities.

So a pilot program that will mold itself to the needs of residents in 
four Tacoma neighborhoods is set to begin this month.

The Bryant, Tacoma Avenue, Jennie Reed and Arlington areas selected 
as the first recipients of Tacoma's Community Based Services program 
are relatively tiny slices of the city. The largest is home to 2,243 
residents and covers 90 blocks.

But they will command a lot of attention and resources. The City 
Council allocated $800,000 in the 2006 budget to launch the program.

The city picked neighborhoods based on criteria that included the 
frequency of calls for police and fire services and the presence of 
neighborhood groups willing to help, said assistant public works 
director Craig Sivley.

Teams of police and building inspectors, augmented by economic 
development employees, human rights and services workers, 
firefighters and other city employees as needed, will work with 
residents on neighborhood issues.

They'll focus their crime and nuisance eradication efforts on 
problems big and small, Sivley said.

'Everybody Wants It'

The philosophy has worked well in Iowa's capital city, residents said.

"Everybody wants it," said Ben Bishop, administrator of Des Moines' 
neighborhood inspections division. "Within a year after it started, 
neighborhoods were clamoring for it."

Seven years after the program's 1999 debut in a handful of Des 
Moines' residential areas, 31 of that city's 51 recognized 
neighborhood organizations are part of the Neighborhood Based Service 
Delivery program.

Anderson's vision for improving Tacoma neighborhoods helped make him 
the top pick in a nationwide search for a new city manager last 
spring, Mayor Bill Baarsma said.

Anderson touts the idea with the fervor of an evangelist.

Once a community-based program is established, "you effectively have 
the eyes of everybody in the neighborhood looking on," he said. "A 
$10 issue gets taken care of before it becomes a $500 issue."

Neighbors Set Priorities

Some of the program's targets could seem surprising.

Yes, residents ask police officers and building inspectors to roust 
prostitutes, bust drug dealers and banish burglars.

But sometimes it's the seemingly little issues that wear down 
residents' patience, drag down property values and degrade quality of life.

"It's about the guy speeding down the driveway. The abandoned houses. 
The loud mufflers. The loud parties," said Des Moines police Capt. 
Michael Shay.

It could be trash in a yard, a fence falling down, graffiti on a 
wall, a house unfit for living or a Christmas tree still clogging an 
alley in March, said Dawn Jorgensen, vice chairwoman of the 
Fairground Neighbors for Community Improvement.

"If you deal with quality-of-life issues, then you normally will 
smother the crime issues out," Shay said.

Often, cops who know the neighborhood come across problems on their own.

On a snowy December day, for example, Des Moines police Sgt. Debbie 
Richardson and building inspector Ed Leedom discovered two young men 
smoking marijuana when a business-district door was left open.

The same day, police Sgt. Jeff Edwards helped return a stolen car. 
License plates on the car, which was left illegally on a snow route, 
had been altered.

Somebody's Responsible

Jorgensen knows well the frustration of hunting for a live body in 
the city bureaucracy to deal with a troublesome issue.

That changed when teams of police and building inspectors arrived to 
dedicate their time to specific areas - rather than drop by when a 
problem arose.

"I think the program's been a real good use of the city's resources, 
because somebody's actually responsible" for solving problems, she said.

Residents carry cell phone numbers for the police sergeants and other 
city workers assigned to their neighborhoods. And they don't hesitate 
to use them.

Police sergeants are assigned to the program because they have the 
power and the know-how to get things done, Capt. Shay said.

Fran Koontz, president of the ACCENT Neighborhood Association praised 
the work of code enforcement officers. When a building begins 
deteriorating, the owner is quickly told to fix it up or face fines. 
Cases are opened and followed through to conclusion, she said.

When property owners don't cooperate, the city does the work and uses 
legal means to get its money back, she added.

Measuring Success

Despite the program's seven-year history, Des Moines officials are 
still looking for an effective yardstick for its results.

Des Moines, like other cities across the nation, has seen a drop in 
violent crimes in recent years. FBI statistics show violent crimes in 
the city dropped from 1,117 in 1985 to 699 in 2003.

Since the Neighborhood Based Service Delivery area boundaries don't 
correspond exactly with the city's crime-tracking data, there are no 
hard numbers to back up the claims of success, Shay said.

But officials have seen reports of major offenses go down in the 
neighborhoods, said John Jones, director of research and development 
for Des Moines police.

The quality of life intangibles are more difficult to chart. But they 
exist, Shay said.

"When you see complaints going from, 'There's a drug house down the 
street' to 'Why don't you fix the potholesUKP'," you know you've made 
a key difference," he said.

Yet despite Roger Thompson's rosy assessment of life in his 
neighborhood, there are gripes that the long-troubled River Bend area 
still has problems.

One couple told The Des Moines Register last summer that resurgent 
prostitution and burgeoning drug dealing tested their dream of living 
in a reclaimed inner-city neighborhood.

A much-awaited grocery store lasted only 18 months before pulling 
out, the newspaper reported.

Fans of Neighborhood Based Service Delivery reply that not everything 
can be fixed, but describe safer, more livable neighborhoods with the 
program than without it.

That's the aim in Tacoma, City Manager Anderson said: "But success 
doesn't come overnight. Success takes a while."

He intends to re-evaluate the Community Based Services program in about a year.

In the meantime, the Police Department's community liaison officers 
program and Tacoma CARES will continue their work with larger chunks 
of the city. CARES provides code enforcement, sponsors cleanups and 
coordinates city services in several areas.

Some community members worry the new program could drain resources 
from other neighborhoods.

"Are you going to fix the problem or are you just going to push it 
into the West End or the North End or wherever?" said Ginny 
Eberhardt, chairwoman of the West End Neighborhood Council.

She's worried the needs of the entire city could be lost in the 
ballyhoo over programs designed to lift up certain neighborhoods.

Tacoma CARES coordinator Lisa Wojtanowicz understands the concern but 
said that additional police and building inspectors dedicated to 
specific areas will augment existing programs, not take away from them.

Central Neighborhood Chairman Steve Apling thinks the program will 
work if attention is paid to such details.

His analogy: the city as a huge building with a sprinkler system and 
a fire extinguisher.

"Before the whole building goes up in flames, you're going to grab 
the fire extinguisher and tackle the one spot that needs immediate 
attention," he said.

"I look at this as a potentially very, very good idea."

New teams in tacoma's neighborhoods

How will Tacoma's new partnership among city departments and 
neighborhoods work? Here are some details:

Community Based Services team members work with residents to set 
priorities on crime, blight and nuisance issues.

Two police officers and two building inspectors will form the core of 
a city team that can include crews from the Fire, Public Works and 
other departments as needed.

To begin the program, two teams will each be assigned two neighborhoods.

The dedicated teams will spend all their time working on issues 
within their assigned neighborhoods.

It's a partnership: Residents will be expected to watch for 
suspicious or criminal activity and report problems.

City crews commit to staying in an area once it's stabilized. They 
won't abandon the neighborhood. Drugs, prostitution, burglaries and 
other crimes ruled the River Bend area of Des Moines, Iowa, for years.

And then the Neighborhood Based Service Delivery program came to town.

"We went from having drug dealers on three of four corners to the 
point where you never see them," said Roger Thompson, president of 
the River Bend Neighborhood Association. "Now my neighborhood is 
incredibly safe."
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman