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<br /> <br />ECC <br />UGENE ITY OUNCIL <br />AIS <br />GENDA TEM UMMARY <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />Public Hearing: An Ordinance Concerning Downtown Public Safety Zone; Amending <br />Section 4.874 of the Eugene Code, 1971; and Providing a Sunset Date <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />Meeting Date: November 22, 2010 Agenda Item Number: 4 <br />Department: Eugene Police Staff Contact: Pete Kerns, Chief of Police <br />www.eugene-or.gov Contact Telephone Number: 541-682-5102 <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />ISSUE STATEMENT <br /> <br />This is a public hearing concerning the extension of the sunset date for the Downtown Public Safety <br />Zone (DPSZ) and providing amendments to the ordinance. The amendments add sexual crimes and <br />violations and add Oregon Revised Statutes to applicable provisions for which the municipal court may <br />exclude individuals for 90 days following a show cause hearing or for one year following a conviction. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />BACKGROUND <br /> <br />Long-term, disorder-related issues downtown have been addressed for more than 20 years through <br />special committees, task forces, council goals, City projects, private businesses, etc. Most recently the <br />Downtown Safety Task Team prepared a list of recommendations in December 2009, they believed <br />would improve downtown safety and make the downtown a more welcoming place. Inherent in their <br />recommendations was the understanding that the lack of jail beds as a sanction remains a critical <br />component to the persistent problems occurring downtown. The Downtown Safety Task Team’s <br />recommendations were summarized in the 12-Point Downtown Safety Improvement Plan adopted by the <br />City Council on January 27, 2010. The civil exclusion process was developed as a tool to offset the lack <br />of jail sanctions and to create an alternative to incarceration to displace chronic violators and improve <br />safety and the perception of safety, in the downtown core. <br /> <br />The City Council adopted the Downtown Public Safety Zone Ordinance No. 20419 on August 11, 2008. <br />The ordinance was established with a sunset date of August 11, 2010. The first arraignment date of a <br />DPSZ exclusion occurred six weeks later on October 31, 2008. During the first 20 months that the DPSZ <br />was in effect, 96 exclusions were requested by the police and 93 percent were granted by the courts. <br />Two types of disruptive minor offenses, liquor violations and criminal trespass were significantly <br />reduced in the DPSZ. Top priority police emergency 9-1-1 calls from the DPSZ dropped starting in <br />2008, although more assaults have been reported in the DPSZ. The 88 exclusion cases involving 94 <br />individuals included 272 different charges – an average of 2.9 charges per individual. A relatively small <br />group of alcohol-involved frequent criminal offenders who impact the DPSZ and a few other <br />neighborhoods may be growing in number. These individuals account for 0.43 percent of all offenders in <br />Eugene and commit 9.1 percent of all offenses. This group of alcohol-involved, chronic offenders <br />commits so many offenses that their demographics are a contributing cause of the over-representation of <br />individuals downtown who report they are homeless. <br /> <br /> Z:\CMO\2010 Council Agendas\M101122\S1011224.doc <br />