In Oakland, Private Force May Be Hired for Security
In a basement office that serves as a police headquarters and community center, Oakland Chinatown leaders pored over maps of the neighborhood with representatives from a private security firm last week.
“Many of our merchants are already installing cameras,” said Carl Chan, the chairman of the Chinatown Chamber of Commerce, outlining in highlighter the several blocks that form the core of the area. “Eventually, we will be hiring security guards to patrol Chinatown.”
In the wake of the city’s laying off 80 police officers last month, Chinatown is leading a new trend in the crime-ridden city: an increase in privately financed public safety. Mr. Chan has asked every business owner to install a street-facing camera. A new Chinatown security force, perhaps staffed by armed guards, could be on the streets as soon as next month, he said.
The layoffs, which helped close a budget deficit of more than $30 million, eliminated a community-policing program that assigned officers to walk their beats and attend neighborhood meetings. Now some residents are pooling resources to restore a law-enforcement presence. The affluent Montclair District in the Oakland Hills and the Kings Estates neighborhood in East Oakland are also looking into private patrols.
Experts say the combination of police and private security that Chinatown is pursuing reflects a new approach to public safety.
“We’ve been doing policing more or less the same way for a couple hundred years,” said Barry Krisberg, a criminologist at the Center for Criminal Justice at the University of California, Berkeley. “We’ve reached a point financially where we have to start exploring new ways to deliver law enforcement.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/13/us/13bcsecurity.html?_r=2
2008 Was The Most Serious Financial Crisis since the 1929 Wall Street Crash. When viewed in a global context, taking into account the instability generated by speculative trade, the implications of this crisis are far-reaching. The financial meltdown will inevitably backlash on consumer markets, the global housing market, and more broadly on the process of investment in the production of goods and services.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
NY Times: Business Owners Hiring Mercenaries as Police Budgets Cut
In Oakland, Private Force May Be Hired for Security In a basement office that serves as a police headquarters and community center, Oakland ...
-
By Chris Nuttall in San Francisco Published: January 21 2009 23:24 | Last updated: January 22 2009 01:26 A consumer love affair with Apple ...
-
Downturn Severe Despite Some Stabilizing SLIDESHOW Previous Next Eddie McNeely, 40, looks over paperwork in a prepara...
-
In Rolling Stone Issue 1082-83, Matt Taibbi takes on "the Wall Street Bubble Mafia" — investment bank Goldman Sachs. The piece has...
No comments:
Post a Comment