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Item 2: Ordinance on Downtown Public Safety Zone
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Item 2: Ordinance on Downtown Public Safety Zone
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Agenda Item Summary
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9/17/2012
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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 Extending the Sunset Date for the Downtown <br />Public Safety Zone; Amending Sections 4.874, 4.876 and 4.878 of the <br />Eugene Code, 1971; and Repealing Section 4.875 of that Code <br /> <br /> <br />Meeting Date: September 17, 2012 Agenda Item Number: 2 <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 />The Downtown Public Safety Zone is scheduled to sunset November 30, 2012. A public hearing will be <br />held to consider an extension of the Downtown Public Safety Zone and to consider modifications to the <br />program in response to community concern. <br /> <br /> <br />BACKGROUND <br /> <br /> The City Council adopted the Downtown Public Safety Zone (DPSZ) Ordinance No. 20419 in August <br />2008. Most recently, the City Council extended the ordinance until November 30, 2012. This public <br />hearing is intended to solicit community input on a proposal to extend the Downtown Public Safety Zone <br />and make modifications to the program. <br /> <br />In December 2009, the Downtown Safety Task Team prepared a list of recommendations they believed <br />would improve downtown safety and make the downtown a more welcoming place. Subsequently, the <br />12-Point Downtown Safety Improvement Plan was adopted by the City Council in January 2010. <br />Inherent in the recommendation was the understanding that the lack of jail beds as a sanction remains a <br />critical component to the persistent problems occurring downtown. The civil exclusion process is a tool <br />to offset the lack of jail sanctions, to create an alternative to incarceration for chronic violators, and to <br />improve the safety in the downtown core. <br /> <br /> As long as there is inadequate jail bed capacity to meet the demand, the Downtown Public Safety Zone <br />has functioned as a stop-gap measure, to hold offenders accountable, and reduce the number of re- <br />offenders in the downtown core. Other services to support individuals in crisis like CAHOOTS, youth <br />services are also critical to improving safety downtown. <br /> <br />Data Available <br />Since the last council discussion about the Downtown Public Safety Zone, staff has implemented several <br />measures to improve timely and thorough access to data for all new cases since March. Additionally, <br />staff is working backwards to hand-tabulate this information prior to March 2012. Currently, this <br />additional data is available for all cases from January 2012 through August 15, 2012. <br /> <br /> <br />S:\CMO\2012 Council Agendas\M120917\S1209172.doc <br /> <br />
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