Pubdate: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 Source: Oshawa This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Oshawa This Week Contact: http://www.durhamregion.com/dr/info/oshawa/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1767 Author: Jillian Follert MUSIC TO FIGHT CRIME BY OSHAWA -- A downtown bar owner is hoping classical music will repel the crowds that congregate on the sidewalk outside his establishment and the City is willing to give it a try. When Joseph Saraco took over ownership of Corner Pocket just over a year ago, he knew the downtown bar had a seedy reputation. But even he was surprised by how out of hand things had become. "It was nuts, just nuts," he says recalling his first few months overseeing the Prince Street bar. "There were people doing lines right off the tables." Today, Mr. Saraco says things have improved "one hundred per cent" on his watch. The bar and washrooms have been renovated and people caught using drugs inside are barred from returning. He estimates about a dozen dealers have been kicked out too. There is live music on Friday nights and even karaoke. Now, the biggest problem is the hoard that regularly gathers on the sidewalk out front. When Mr. Saraco tried to renew his business licence before the new year, councillors raised the alarm, asking that he install outdoor security cameras to deter crime on the street. He balked, arguing the $15,000 cost would force the business to close its doors. Enter the classical music compromise. At Monday's meeting of the audit budget and corporate services committee, councillors agreed to let Mr. Saraco try playing classical tunes outside Corner Pocket, on the condition that he also point one of his existing indoor cameras at the street. Using classical music to deter crime and loitering isn't new. The trend started at 7-11 convenience stores in the 1990s and is now employed everywhere from crime-ridden American street corners, to subway stations in London, England. Locally, the Oshawa Centre has made use of the idea, playing classical music outside the movie theatre on certain nights. "A camera will deter the activity, music will deter the activity, but you also have to change your business and manage it to get different kind of clientele," warned Coun. Parkes, who says she once had a negative encounter in the vicinity of Mr. Saraco's bar. "It's tough to turn a place like that around. You have to have a zero tolerance for drugs and drug activity." Mr. Saraco said he's trying his best to change the bar's image and believes the City should help by moving some of the social services agencies away from the downtown core. "They put it all on us to fix, but there's only so much we can do," he said. "You have a methadone clinic and all these things downtown. Where else are all those people going to congregate?" - --- MAP posted-by: Derek