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Stakeouts aim to curb graffiti

By: Brent Begin
Examiner Staff Writer
March 18, 2009

San Francisco officials say they have seen an increase in complaints about graffiti. (Examiner file photo)

SAN FRANCISCO — Police are turning to stakeouts in order to nab graffiti vandals.

The City has seen an uptick in complaints about graffiti, specifically to the 311 call center.

A series of stake-out operations are planned between the California Highway Patrol and the Police Department. The law enforcement agencies are targeting overpasses and freeway signs after a series of bold vandalism incidents on Highway 101.

“It’s costing The City millions,” said Mohammed Nuru, the Department of Public Works deputy director, who oversees graffiti cleanup for The City. “They’re using climbing gear. They’re sophisticated and climbing up sheer surfaces.”

After averaging about 1,400 calls a month, that number climbed in December to more than 3,000. Those calls have continued to roll in at a steady pace, and city officials want to catch the vandals in the act.

Officer Christopher Putz of the San Francisco Police Department’s graffiti unit said he believes the increase is not in graffiti incidents, but in citizen reporting of the vandalism.

Nuru is heading a graffiti task force, which is lobbying to pass even stricter policies regarding graffiti in upcoming months, including a law prohibiting spray-painted vehicles from parking in a residential area and creating a Superior Court position that deals strictly with vandalism cases.

Other cities have installed barbed wire around posts so they are more difficult to climb. Nuru said they hope to catch the recent vandals before turning San Francisco into a “prison yard.”

The hardest-hit areas are the Financial District, SoMa, the Mission and Chinatown, according to authorities. Some neighborhood advocates said they have not noticed the increase.

“I haven’t seen a huge difference than what it was,” said Erick Arguello, who heads the Lower 24th Street Merchant and Neighborhood Association. “It comes and goes, just like crime.”

Keith Goldstein, who heads the Potrero Hill Merchants Association, said he recently followed up on a complaint about graffiti, but didn’t find an increase in his neighborhood.

City officials are also looking to boost the reward amount for information about graffiti vandals.

The City’s Graffiti Rewards Fund typically offers residents $250 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of suspects. However, the reward has been boosted to $1,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those who took part in defacing highway signs last weekend on southbound Highway 101 at Third and Bayshore streets.

To apply for the reward, visit www.sfgov.org/dpw or call 311.

Surge in graffiti complaints

From July to November, graffiti complaints to The City’s 311 call center averaged about 1,400 per month.

Month Complaints
December 3,066
January 3,396
February 2,668
Through March 17 1,681

Source: Department of Public Works

bbegin@sfexaminer.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Reader

Mar 18, 2009

Do not penalize the people who have their personal or commercial vehicles vandalized. If you have DPW or SFPD just sit through a bus ride on the 38, 14, 29, or any other of the rougher bus lines, you'll catch a bulk of the taggers in the act. Why are citizens going to make an effort to stop vandalism if police are not going to have a zero-tolerance policy? Muni buses have cameras, but buses are still vandalized like a blank slate.

 

biggerbetterdeal

Mar 18, 2009

why not have individuals caught for tagging put on a program to help clean up the neighborhood they feel the need to destroy with graffiti? Most of the individuals doing the tagging are repeat offenders. I see the same tag EVERYWHERE in my neighborhood. I can only imagine the $$ this person has caused in damages.

 

heat

Mar 19, 2009

i believe all the graffiti really shouldnt be counted as vandalism, these people use graffiti to express them selfs and most of them have actually used graffiti as a way to get away from getting in to gangs like nortenos and surenos. graffiti is a way of life for these people and can be really inspiring if you think about the causes for their graffiti

 

responder

Mar 19, 2009

This is ridiculous. Lets spend more money on graffiti in such an desperate economic time? Its time the city gets it's priority's straight.

 

responder

Mar 19, 2009

This is ridiculous. Lets spend more money on graffiti in such an desperate economic time? Its time the city gets it's priority's straight.

 

responder

Mar 19, 2009

This is ridiculous. Lets spend more money on graffiti in such an desperate economic time? Its time the city gets it's priority's straight.

 

Thomas Hawk

Mar 19, 2009

"The people who truly deface our neighbourhoods are the companies that scrawl giant slogans across buildings and buses trying to make us feel inadequate unless we buy their stuff. They expect to be able to shout their message in your face from every available surface but you're never allowed to answer back. Well, they started the fight and the wall is the weapon of choice to hit them back. Some people become cops because they want to make the world a better place. Some people become vandals because they want to make the world a better looking place." -- Banksy, Wall and Piece

 

READER

Mar 19, 2009

GET MORE GRAFFITI PROGRAMS OR CLASES GOING SO THEY CAN STOP FROM GOING OUT DAY OR NIGHT TAGGING UP THE CITY

 

ClassicalKaly

Mar 21, 2009

My English class is currently writing a formal essay about the definition of graffiti. Graffiti is a crime no matter how beautiful or artistic the piece is perceived because vandalism and destruction of property is illegal and should be punished. Over the years, as graffiti becomes more and more obtrusive, who will want to live in a dirty city overrun with painted images on every coverable space? Congratulations to Banksy for making millions of dollars as an artist even though he began his artistic career as a criminal. Regardless of what Banksy says about corporations, vandalizing property that people worked hard to purchase is disrespectful and shows just how uncivilized these "graffiti artists" really are. You wanna draw? Draw on yourself, your clothes, your face, etc. Put your "art" online to get exposure, offer to commission free murals to businesses. There are ways to gain fame/recognition legally if you truly are a motivated artist and want to succeed.

 

isntitironic?

Mar 24, 2009

how is a city gonna waste thousands of dollars on "graffiti stakeouts" and prosicute taggers for years at a time when a child molester can get off with less..alright your mad that someone wrote their name in your neighborhood on a sign but you have no problem with a hundred foot billboard of a bottle of cologne in your face?? get over it graffiti is gonna be here FOREVER as it has been since the begining of time. I USED TO SELL CRACK...NOW I JUST DO GRAFFITI.

 

Erick Arguello

Mar 27, 2009

I want to clarilfy my comment for this article sayings that we have a huge problem with graffiti in the Mission and it goes from bad to worst in sweeps. It hurts business and cost us the tax payers millions of dollers. Erick Arguello Lower 24th St. Merchants and Neighborhood Association

 

Jun 7, 2009

While a plotting to fight graffiti by destroying it you should stop to realize meybe to understand the point of veiw of the other. Create legal graffiti walls around the city meybe in parks or other locations. It would give them a place rather than none. Like a public art show. Ruducing illegal graffiti but not stoping it intirely. The walls can be maintained by the graffiti writers themselves. The cost should be less then the cost of prison. Meybe take out those ugly billboards and give space for street artists to shine. And if you don't like what's painted paint somthing better over it. Besides why be the person who abolished graffiti when you can be the one who gave them a place to do there work then they will have a choice to do the right thing.

 

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