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Coral Gables
Zone Defense
Chief praises new police patrol
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Don Slesnick |
By
Angie Hargot
Coral Gables Police Chief Michael Hammerschmidt told an
occasionally skeptical City Commission Tuesday that the city’s new
policing strategy is, so far, a success. According to
Hammerschmidt, in the two months since the plan was enacted,
arrests are up and overtime hours have been reduced by 3 percent.
“We’ve been watching as, around the country, crime [rates] started
to creep up and we weren’t affected — until last year,”
Hammerschmidt said, adding that the crime level in
Coral Gables
is not alarming.
According to semi-annual data reported to the Florida Department of
Law Enforcement, however, the city experienced a 0.4 percent
overall increase in crime in the first half of 2007, the most
recent data available. Most notably, five rapes were reported in
the first six months of 2007, compared with four in the entire
previous year. The city also had 26 reports of robberies in the
first half of 2007, a number rapidly approaching 2006’s 35-robbery
total. The FDLE has said it expects to release annual reports for
2007 in the coming weeks.
The Coral Gables Police Department’s revamped patrol went into
effect on Jan. 8. Previously, the city had been divided into 12
patrol zones, with an officer assigned to each. But the costly
system wasn’t as effective as it could be, Hammerschmidt said, so
two months ago he overhauled the patrol regions, dividing the
entire city into two squads and four zones: two north and two
south of U.S. 1.
The clunky 12-zone system was ineffective, he said, and cost far
too much money in overtime; if an officer couldn’t work, it meant
overtime for his replacement — a pricey situation for the
department’s almost $38 million annual police budget.
Hammerschmidt’s new system, based partly on the Comstat police
schedule system that originated in
New York City,
assigns one sergeant and eight officers to each of the two squads,
with about six officers on duty at any given time. The sergeant,
equipped with a GPS tracking system, monitors each officer’s
physical location.
“To address crime, we are concerned with coverage and visibility,”
Hammerschmidt said. “With zone patrol you’re relying on a lot of
luck that the officer is in the right place at the right time.” He
said that distributing officers evenly throughout the city doesn’t
allow effective coverage of crime “hot spots.” Instead, the
department now assigns coverage based on the highest crime spots
by region, day and time.
He added that visibility — offenders actually seeing the patrol
cars on the street — deters crime. Hammerschmidt said that since
the new system was implemented, arrests for property crime have
increased. He related anecdotes of suspect apprehensions, one of
which included a small gang of boys allegedly trespassing onto a
property, for, a witness presumed, the purpose of robbery.
“Because [police] swarmed the area we were able to apprehend all
four,” a feat not likely in a zone configuration, Hammerschmidt
said.
But the new plan is not without its critics. Vice Mayor William
Kerdyk has heard from residents concerned that the new strategy is
nothing but a cost-cutting measure.
“I want you to assure residents that it is assisting us in the
financial situation, but we’re not putting citizens in danger” to
accomplish it, Kerdyk said.
Commissioner Rafael Cabrera, who made clear that he had a great
deal of faith in the chief’s experience and professionalism, said
he had received complaints about a lack of visibility, and
insinuations that sending more police to hot spots might be a more
reactive than proactive approach to crime fighting.
Residents told him that “for the first time ever, [they] were not
seeing police cars in [their] neighborhoods,” Cabrera said, adding
that some of the complaints originated in the southern portion of
the city, where many gated communities pay extra to hire off-duty
police, Florida Highway Patrol officers or private security firms
to patrol their streets.
Although Hammerschmidt noted that police response times have not
been affected, he did acknowledge the citizens’ concern reported
by Mayor Don Slesnick that police officers deployed this way would
spend too much time, well, shooting the breeze.
“I’ve received comments [that residents] see more and more officers
parked together [and chatting]”, Slesnick said.
“Sure, they B.S. a little to break the monotony,” allowed
Hammerschmidt. “Our supervisors understand that it’s on their
shoulders to make this system work.”
Hammerschmidt said that although the department monitors the
success of the strategy and crime statistics at the end of each
month and then cumulatively, he plans to reevaluate the new
tactics in June.
Comments? E-mail
Angie@miamisunpost.com
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