Pubdate: Wed, 28 Feb 2007 Source: Pensacola News Journal (FL) Copyright: 2007 The Pensacola News Journal Contact: http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1675 CRIME, POVERTY STATISTICS SHOW PENSACOLA HAS ITS OWN BROWNSVILLE Residents in West Pensacola are asking the logical question: What happens if Operation Brownsville pushes criminals and crime into their neighborhood? But given the crime and poverty statistics for the area, the better question might be whether West Pensacola isn't the logical place for Operation What's Next. Those statistics are eye-opening, and make us wonder what this sort of close examination might turn up elsewhere. Information from the Pensacola Police Department is that 20 percent of the city's crimes, and 35 percent of its narcotics violations, take place in neighborhoods west of A Street, even though the area covers only 5 percent of the city's surface area. Even if there is some adjustment to be made for population density, those are startling figures. If the figures are skewed because, as one police official said, the police tend to spend a lot of time in the area, the natural question arises: Why are they there? The answer: Because there is so much crime there? Reporters looking into the situation get some of the same responses they get in Brownsville. That includes people scared to walk their own streets, tales of being approached by drug dealers openly looking for customers and fears of retaliation from criminals who appear to think they own the streets. Police officials say they are increasing patrols in the areas bordering Brownsville to intercept trouble, and that's good. But the city should cast a Brownsville-like eye on the situation and evaluate whether a similar operation is warranted. Now, maybe it isn't. Maybe there are factors that make it a different situation than Brownsville. But poverty certainly is a problem, with a poverty rate in the area almost three times that of the city as a whole. And a study for the city found that the area contains 25 percent of the city's deteriorating structures. Operation What Next could include a crackdown on code violations, a concerted effort to develop information from citizens about loiterers who might be dealing drugs, and about houses and other locations that might be the site of drug dealing or prostitution, and demolition of abandoned structures, for a start. Of course, it will pay off only if there is a plan to keep the pressure on the criminals and help residents retake their neighborhood. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman