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Friday, September 26, 2008

Jim Ireton On Task Force Meeting










On September 23, 2008 the city of Salisbury’s current administration announced the formation of a new Crime Task Force. For residents of our city who deal with neighborhood blight that leads to more assaults, break ins, prostitution, rape, robberies, auto thefts, and ultimately murders…this action comes far to late for our community to feel like the administration has our best interests in the forefront.

Though every member of the new task force should be commended for participating it is abundantly clear that the citizens of Salisbury have already spoken on the matter of crime and what they want to see our city do.

As our substations have been shuttered. Our police budgets not funded. Our Type 1 crime rates continue far above the national average. Our taxes have gone up 25% in a decade and not a single new police position. Our voices have not been heard. How do we know this…

In every one of our neighborhoods our crime rates have not subsided. Neighborhoods where people are trying to raise families, where homeownership levels are dwindling, the approach to policing our people has not been effective. In the last month, these neighborhoods still teeter on the edge. In the:

University Neighborhood – Averaging 66 calls per week over the last month

Princeton Homes – Averaging 80 calls per week for service over the last month

The Eastside – Averaging 52 calls per week for service over the last month

The Westside – Averaging 140 calls per week for service over the last month

Church Street Neighborhood – Averaging 95 calls for service per week over the last month

Smith Street in North Camden – Averaging 52 calls per week for service over the last month

Our community has said loud and clear what it wants from city hall, and it is not another study! The Chamber of Commerce Crime Reduction Task Force, the coordinated efforts of area law enforcement to get a handle on our gang problem, the signatures on petitions to keep substations on Smith Street and Cecil Street open, the efforts of our neighborhood associations to plead with officials to for help, all of this work has been done, yet we face the establishing of yet another task force.

The crime fighting police officers in this city deserve better than what they have gotten from city hall. And when they suffer, our neighborhoods suffer. Our officers are understaffed and underpaid. In every year since 2003, our police chief has requested additional positions and pay and has gotten none from this administration in its yearly budgets.

2003 – 4 Additional Police Officers not funded

2004 – 5% increase in salaries not funded

2005 – 6% increase in salaries not funded

2006 – 4 Additional Police Officers not funded

2007 – 12 Additional Police Officers not funded

2008 – 6 Additional Police Officers not funded

Law enforcement has been telling city hall what they need, what neighborhoods want, and what could be done to bring crime rates down…city hall has not listened.

Even when we were told that a tax increase for pay parity was need the administration only funded one year of it after getting the tax increase through council. The council majority was pleaded with to comb to through the budget to make cuts to fund public safety…but that too, fell on deaf ears.

So instead of funding the number of police officers requested by the police chief, the number of police officers requested by the public at budget hearings, the number of police officers needed by neighborhoods battling crime on a daily basis – our city administration, with the help of the council majority did nothing. They have accepted virtually every annexation that comes their way – increasing the size of the city that our understaffed and underfunded police department must reach, given away hard earned tax dollars for developer reimbursements, and refused to do due diligence at budget time in order to scrape money together for officers in our neighborhoods.

This new task force is a pre-election season ploy by an administration that has refused to pay for better police protection while paying lip service to our neighborhoods greatest in need.

A good part of the solution to bringing crime rates as already been suggested…what citizens need now is immediate relief by way of reopening police substations and increased numbers in police personnel. More officers on foot patrol and increased bike patrol, comprehensive enforcement of housing codes intended to protect our neighborhoods, the need for increasing the number of jobs which sustain families, homes and neighborhoods….all of these things have been told to city hall.

While the new crime task force could eventually bring something to the table, citizens are outraged at that the administrations response to years of discussing the solutions would be to create another commission.

It is time, in this community, to hear the voices of citizens who deal with the problem of crime every day.

For those neighbors who stand up for their communities, there is no time to waste, no time for more studying. There is only a time for action.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

I wanted to make this meeting but could not because of time contraints on my schedule. Thanks for posting this info. It's way past time for the citizens to raise a little more hell with this. It makes me sick to my stomach to see nothing being done.

Anonymous said...

Job #1 -

Get a police chief who wears the uniform and lives in the City!

Anonymous said...

Simple solution:

Merge SPD into the Sheriff's dept. and convert it into a countywide police force (like many other counties have done) with Mike Lewis as the Chief.

Anonymous said...

who is this guy? ive heard the name over the years but who is he?

Anonymous said...

Anon 946 Lets start at the top.

Job #1 get a new mayor that cares about the city they live in and not the developers that visit here.

Job #2 get a police chief that is a real cop not a rent a cop on permanent vacation.

Job #3 get a council that wants to work for the city not the other way around.

Anonymous said...

So if the Mayor is in possession of all the statistics and she's been repeatedly asked for more police by her own Chief of Police and the public, why hasn't she and her puppet majority on the City Council given us more cops? If the other crime task force found the substations should be open and get cops on the streets and citizens even signed a petition about opening the substations, why didn't she and her puppets do it? If they say there simply wasn't enough money in the budget, I'd throw those multi-million dollar TIFS right back in their faces. They're simply incompetent and they don't care.

Anonymous said...

This crime TF is just another waste of time and I agree that it is the mayors attempt to "look" as if she is doing something. There is no quick fix! The solution starts at home. Unfortunately these homes are in ruin and the kids have no chance of success. Good luck TF mambers!

Anonymous said...

9:50,
A short answer: hopefully, he is our next mayor. Longer answer: he is a school teacher, lives in one of the more crime-riddled neighborhoods, and has been a community activist for years. Was on the City Council years ago.

Anonymous said...

10:03 --

We may have a miracle of good luck soon:

One of the networks is going to do another "Kojak" series and has asked Chiefy to do a test episode as a Telly Savalas clone since he knows how to wear a $500 suit so well.

Anonymous said...

Its the same in every community. The cops need and want stuff. The politicians say "no" due to POLICE being the largest portion of the budget. Reason, they work 24-7,365 days. Largest salary Budget. Instead of cutting usless spending, no brains are used and taxes are raised to justify need. John Q public gets mad, police still don't get what they asked for from that money. Money goes to feel good or usless projects. One big nasty circle. For an easy example, Go to a Delmar town meeting, smiles & denial, and denial, and denial. Blame shifts towards department heads whom have no power over the city manager's decisions. Hey TAX ME, but let me see IMPROVEMENT!!!!!

Anonymous said...

You can arrest all the people you want, but if the law doesn't make the punishment harder than the crime nothing will be accomplished.

Anonymous said...

Is it not having enough officers, or is it the officers targeting the "non major" problems like college kids drinking beer?

Anonymous said...

Jim Ireton is also on the Wicomico County Neighborhood Congress and head of the Wicomico County Democratic Party, I believe.

Anonymous said...

Thank you Joe for being at the most worthwhile meeting I have been to in years. Jim Ireton did a great job presenting the awful and criminal statistics. Criminal, the Mayor and her stooges are the criminals, they have refused to listen to the people, they have refused to listen to Debbie Campbell and Terry Cohen, they have refused to help the people in their own city.

Criminals...........yes. every time there is a crime against a person, think carefully, if we had more police presence, that crime would probably not happen. Think, carefully that Mayor Tilghman and her three stooges are partially responsible. Finally someone, in the community namely Jim Ireton, has stepped up, and told it like it is..... he is my hero...

Unknown said...

Backwards thinking is the eastern shore specialty. Crime has always been a problem here. Its statistically gotten worse and will continue to do so. Yet another reason Salisbury isnt the utopia that most ppl(the mayor) think it is.

Anonymous said...

SPD needs 30 more police officers, just think if you say yes right now to more, it will be 1 year before they start work and several years before they are rounded enough to start making a difference on their own. SPD is too far gone now, combine with the Sheriff's Dept and save money. You have to have a sheriff's dept by Md law so lets make it work people.