These findings are among the highlights of Community Policing in
Chicago, Year Seven, the sixth report issued by an IPR evaluation
team that has been following the progress of Chicagos experimental
CAPS program since late 1992. Its partly a language and culture problem for Latinos,
suspects principal investigator Wesley Skogan (IPR-Political Science).
Though the city has done much to promote the program among Latinos, especially
in Spanish, they have been falling behind. By contrast, the research team found substantial improvement in neighborhood
conditions reported by African-American and white Chicagoans. In African-American
areas, reports of serious drug and gang problems dropped from 50% to 30%
between 1994 and 1999, and the residents ratings of other crime
problems dropped by about one-third. The report reveals trends during the 1990s for crime, city services,
and citizen involvement in the CAPS program. Satisfaction with police services. Though the teams 1999
report was skeptical about many behind-the-scenes aspects of the program,
giving it a C+ in the publics eye, according to Skogan,
residents in 2000 reported significant improvements in police demeanor,
responsiveness, and effectiveness. These improvements were across the
board for whites, blacks, and Latinos, with racial minority views improving
by about 20 percentage points between 1993 and 1999. Nevertheless, after five years of citywide community policing, just half
of the residents surveyed rated police performance as satisfactory, and
less than 60% thought police were doing a good job in responding to community
concerns. Beat meetings. On average, nearly 6,000 residents a month attended
some 250 beat meetings throughout the city. Although some feared citizen
involvement would flag as the program became routine, that figure has
remained constant since 1995. Participation rates were highest in poorer
and high-crime areas, but within neighborhoods there was a consistent
middle-class bias in those who came. Home owners and long-term residents
were more likely to turn out, a familiar pattern in studies of volunteer-based
social programs. Attendees were more positive about police performance than community
residents who did not attend. The team found large racial differences
in the optimism gap, especially between the views of African-Americans
and Latinos who attended meetings and their neighbors who did not. Social disorder problems were most frequently discussed at the beat meetings,
particularly gang loitering, public drinking, noise, and bad landlords.
Drug problems were brought up at two-thirds of the meetings, and there
were complaints about policing, particularly their slow response to 911
calls and lack of police visibility in the neighborhood. District Advisory Committees (DACs). A major element of the CAPS
program has been the creation of committees comprised of residents, business
owners, and other community members who meet regularly with police to
identify and discuss local crime and disorder issues, set priorities,
and develop strategies for addressing them. The report was discouraging
about their performance: After seven years, confusion about the
missions of the DACs persists. Low membership, poor or insufficient direction,
and irregular contact with their parent body caused many to founder.
Latinos were noticeably underrepresented on the committees, even in heavily
Latino areas. Though their purpose was to identify the larger issues,
DAC meetings were dominated by beat-level concerns, and often led by police
rather than committee members. Community mobilization. Beginning in 1998, the city deployed a
cadre of community organizerssome directly supervised by the city,
some members of partnering community groupsto help some of the most
troubled communities rebuild their capacity to solve problems and interact
more smoothly with police and city agencies. Skogans team found
no clear answers for which type of organizer was more effective.
For both, there were positives and negatives. The best of the partnering organizations were staffed by experienced
professionals. They represented dedicated constituencies and often offered
expertise in areas such as community redevelopment, schools, youth, and
the elderly. Others, however, focused on their organizations interests
rather than CAPS, ignored non-members of their traditional constituency,
and lacked experience with crime prevention. The city-hired organizers spent more time attending beat and district
meetings to facilitate CAPS projects and to work on improving resident/police
relations. They helped promote neighborhood safety in schools and were
successful in bringing city services to communities long deprived by neglect. By many measures, the researchers found conditions in the beats they
evaluated had improved after the first year of the community organizers
program: Fear went down, informal social control strengthened, and
many serious neighborhood problems were in decline. However, since
parallel changes occurred in many other areas of the city, it was not
always clear how much could be attributed to the program. Management initiatives. A series of management changes were implemented
in the past year to establish a clear line of accountability at the district
level for making CAPS work. A new Office of Management Accountability
is monitoring resource allocation, district and area planning and effectiveness,
and analyzing crime trends and issues of public concern. The department
has restructured its planning process to improve problem-solving in each
district. These management initiatives are a major focus of the evaluation
groups ongoing research. |