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Police return to foot patrols to try to curb rising crime downtown and on the Common; residents, parks advocates say more work needed

Kennedy with sharps container

At hearing, mother took items out of her diaper bag: Diapers, wipes, a spare onesie and a sharps container for discarded needles on the ground.

At a hearing on public-safety issues downtown and around Boston Common today, Elizabeth Vizza had a request for suburbanite do-gooders who keep coming to the Common to feed the homeless: Stop!

Vizza, president of the Friends of the Public Garden, which also looks out for the Common, said well meaning suburban feeders who think they are "saving souls" are actually harming the Common and even the people they're trying to help: By feeding people with mental-health and substance-abuse problems on the Common, the out of towners are keeping them from seeking out meals at the well stocked kitchens at nearby places such as St. Francis House - where, unlike on the Common, the hungry could also gain access to the help that might help them get into treatment, and get them away from the sometimes violent drug dealers who menace not only them, but residents and tourists just trying to enjoy one of the city's key parks.

At today's hearing, called by City Councilors Ed Flynn, who represents downtown, and Julia Mejia, Vizza, downtown and Beacon Hill residents and city officials said that crime - and equally important, the fear of crime - has gone up over the past six months as people ejected from Mass and Cass wound up on the Common, particularly around the Brewer Fountain, and nearby areas, such as the intersection of Winter and Tremont streets, but even on the other side of Beacon Hill, such as the Appleton Footbridge to the Esplanade.

While downtown and the Common have always had populations of homeless and people with drug problems, the past year has seen an explosion in their numbers, and far worse, in the often violent drug dealers who prey on them, they said.

Flynn pointed to stabbings at the fountain and across Tremont at Winter Place and said a few months ago, a woman standing at Boylston and Tremont suffered a broken nose when somebody just went up to her and punched her in the face.

Vizza said things got so bad this summer that Berklee College pulled its students out of a performance series at the Brewer Fountain after an incident in which a woman with mental-health issues began harassing the students, then eventually took her clothes off and jumped into the fountain. Only police were able to get her out, she said.

Katherine Kennedy of Beacon Hill, who has two children, 5 and 7 months, that she filed the first of a series of 311 reports about discarded needles on Sept. 9, when she walked her oldest child to her first day at preschool. She continued: "Sept. 30. Oct. 7. Oct. 9. Oct. 11. Oct. 12. And Oct. 15." Kennedy started her statement by pulling items out of her diaper bag, which ended with her holding up the sharps container she now carries for discarded needles.

"I accept that raising a family in the city is complicated," she said. "I accept trash, cigarette butts, nip bottles and even broken glass, but this is unacceptable."

City Councilor Sharon Durkan, who said she lives just a short walk from the Common on Beacon Hill, however, said a recent series of swarms by police have restored some semblance of order and even peace to the fountain and nearby areas on the Common.

BPD Deputy Supt. Dan Humphreys said the on-foot swarming is part of a "giant pivot" by Commissioner Michael Cox to get officers out of their cruisers in general and to target certain areas particularly affected by the dismantling of the tent city at Mass and Cass: The Common, the South End and Andrew and Nubian squares.

"We are doing a very intentional redeployment of officers" into those areas, he said, adding the department is using both 311 and 911 reports to figure out where to send officers, which includes not just areas with high crime rates but where reports indicate "a fear of crime."

"This is the beginning," he said, adding officers on these patrols, known as "interaction groups," are even told to file their own 311 reports on things that are not direct police issues, but which are quality of life issues, such as discarded needles.

Humphreys added the department is also beginning to pay more attention than it once did to traffic enforcement, which can't come soon enough for Rishi Shukla, a 25-year downtown resident and co-founder of the Downtown Boston Neighborhood Association. Shukla said that in addition to the rise of open drug dealing and use across downtown, downtown's 12,000 residents now also take their lives in their hands just walking out their doors.

"We can't have mopeds, scooters and bikers running through red lights, hitting pedestrians and having near misses," he said.

Flynn repeated his call for a "zero tolerance" policy, in which criminal offenders are sent off to state prison on even their first offense, as opposed to the revolving door he said now dumps them right back on the Common to commit more crimes and get arrested. Flynn, who has also called repeatedly for cutting city budgets, also called for more police officers - and services for people with mental-health and substance-abuse issues. He also called for finding a way to restore arrest powers to city park rangers, who lost them in 2021. Nobody from the Suffolk County District Attorney's office attended the hearing.

Durkan, however, cautioned that the issue is not black and white, that the Common is not some black hole of terror and that "creating unnecessary fear" risks driving away the businesses that might want to move downtown, investing in the neighborhood, creating more eyes on the street and hiring local residents.

Flynn, who in August demanded an end to all events on the Common, denied fearmongering and also said that he does so represents downtown, after council President Ruthzee Louijeune said Durkan represented the area.

Both councilors and other officials agreed that the homeless need help and caring and that much of the problem is the dealers, especially of fentanyl, who prey on them.

Shukla said he agreed on that point, and with Flynn that the DA and the courts need to simply stop letting people back out onto the street, that downtown residents shouldn't have to walk in fear and that parents in particular shouldn't have to worry about their children "bearing witness to violence."

"How many times can our officers arrest a person only to see them back on the street?" he asked.

Shukla said he appreciated the hearing, but noted it's not the first and said he doesn't want to be asked in six months to attend another one with nothing getting done. Instead, he said, if he had his druthers, he'd assemble city and state officials, police, representatives from local social-services agencies and colleges, then lock them in a room for a few hours until they came up with three or four key actions they would commit to take.

"We all have to do more and we all have to do better," he said.

Michael Nichols, president of the Downtown Boston Alliance - until recently the Downtown Business Improvement District - also called for more work to get drug dealers out of the area.

"Criminal drug dealing has tainted many of the jewels of our city, including Downtown Crossing," he said.

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Comments

I'd like to see crime stats on the Common distinct from those at Downtown Crossing. They are generally combined and used in reference to the Common. We use Park Street every day to and from school and I don't see the war zone that others describe.

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What time are you using park street? I agree with everything that woman said and I am a 35 year old black male from the inner city. Park St and that area is a disgrace. I am not sure what you are seeing but the problems are many. It is very unsafe.

Just passing the problem to other neighborhoods.

But Humphreys said there was one benefit to dispersing Mass and Cass: That area had become such a large, violent and seething area that counselors, housing advocates and others trying to help people break their personal cycles were so scared for their own lives that they were increasingly reluctant to go in. Now, with smaller groups, things are more manageable and people trying to help those in need can try to, well, help them.

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When you have a statement from someone with no lived experience in a matter, the responsible thing to do is to not promote that view, and to seek out insight from people with lived experience to see whether the person is amplifying a mainstream view of people with lived experience, or whether they're saying something that doesn't mesh up. If they're saying something that contradicts what people with lived experience tend to share, it's nonsense that doesn't bear repeating. If people with lived experience are fairly divided, then you report that.

People experiencing chronic homelessness and chronic mental illness will generally tell you that it has been helpful to receive food and other resources with no strings attached and will tell you about all the legitimate reasons they have to run far far away from systems. They'll rarely tell you that receiving food or shelter is "enabling." Hell, most people who are human won't say things like that feeding people is bad. Really, think before reporting these things.

What a bunch of phonies.

Makes me want to go hand out some watercress sandwiches and napkins to the great unwashed on the Common.

Pearl clutching sounds like a sexist trope, Lee. Police yourself.

She is also involved, engaged, and lives in the area. She isn't saying people should starve, she's saying contact should come with some chance of access to services.

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.

We have tried using prison for drug and insanity issues for decades.

If it worked we wouldn't have those issues.

They need treatment for drugs and for the underlying mental illness conditions that often drive their behavior and dependence. That doesn't happen in jail.

Perhaps he should talk with people who know these things sometime? Naw. Too much like work. Too confusing!

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But at the same time letting them go with nothing more then a finger wag isn't working either. They OD get revied and come back the next day to shoot up again. If the fear of death isn't going to stop them then maybe consequences might remove them from society for a time.

They're talking about sending people who keep shooting up into treatment and sending people who are selling the drugs and causing the crime to prison.

Sometimes, those two circles will intersect, but not all of the time.

"We can't have mopeds, scooters and bikers running through red lights, hitting pedestrians and having near misses," he said.

What about the cars and trucks speeding and running reds? Still OK I guess.

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... but SCARY BIKES are the "problem". LOL.

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Yes cars can kill. AND yes mopeds, scooters, and electric bikes can also be a nuisance and injure people if they are hit by them.

They're certainly a nuisance when they are driving through pedestrian areas or on sidewalks, or are driving down bus and train platforms - places you wouldn't expect to be seeing a fast moving - albeit small - vehicle.

I was going into CVS on Washington Street in Downtown last week, and paused as a woman carrying a small child was coming out. We were all nearly hit by a person on a scooter driving up onto the sidewalk there (presumably to pick up meal delivery at the McDonalds next door??). I am pretty sure that would have hurt if we had been hit, and quite possibly injured us all.

For reference - I am a non-driver, someone who biked for transit for many years (until a bad injury stopped this), and am most definitely not pro-car.

The exception- cars running fully red lights- with the rule- mopeds running fully red lights.

Will be to evict the homeless and the mentally ill off the Common and ship them down onto the red line platforms at Park Street and Downtown Crossing.

Every time he opens his mouth

Sharon Durkan is going around taking credit for all of this and you go after Flynn for saying perhaps things are not good on the Common?

Your anti-Boston raised person bias is more naked than 1990's Ibiza.

I'm a little bit country and I'm a little bit rock n' roll

No time for words, meetings, paying consultants, and pretty portfolio action plan graphics to be printed. Action now. Get rid of the root of this problem which is more powerful than Teflon Trump. And that is cocaine, heroin, needles, crack pipes, crack, and the judges, judicial system, and blind eyed people who are afraid to get rid of this root of the problem. Until then, this will never improve even slightly. Stupid enablers.