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America's Deadliest And Poorest City Set To Disband Its Entire Police Force Over Budget Crisis
Zero Hedge ^ | 09/24/2012 | Tyler Durden

Posted on 09/24/2012 9:37:48 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

While the stock market in the US continues to surge (if not so much in China where the composite is back to 2009 lows) as the relentless liquidity tsunami makes its way into stocks, and other Fed frontrunning instruments, and only there, reality for everyone else refuses to wait. Last week we saw reality striking in Greece, where a section of Athens literally shut down after it ran out of all cash. Today, reality comes to the US, and specifically its poorest city, Camden, which is a twofer, doubling down also as America's deadliest city. It turns out Camden is about to become even deadliest-er, as its police force is set to be disbanded following a budget crisis in this effectively insolvent city.

AP reports:

This city, long among the nation's poorest and most crime-ridden, is on the verge of dismantling its police department and starting anew with a force run by the county government.

 

City officials are making the move to increase the number of officers while keeping the cost the same by averting rules negotiated with a union that city officials have seen as unwilling to compromise.

 

Unless the union - which is skeptical of the stated motivations for the change - reaches a deal with the county, no more than 49 per cent of the city's current officers could join the new force and those that do will get pay cuts.

 

John Wilson, a 57-year-old unemployed baker who's lived in the city his whole life, thinks it's worth a try.

 

'The police in Camden clearly haven't been doing their job,' he said last week as he walked to his home in the Parkside neighborhood, which has seen six homicides since the start of 2011.

 

'Any change has to be better. It can't get worse now.'

Oh yes it can. Here's why:

Officials say there are about 170 drug markets operating in this city of 77,000 near Philadelphia, more than 700 people on parole and 600 registered sex offenders.

 

The murder rate is unthinkably high. In 2007, Newark attracted national attention for a record number of homicides.

 

As of Friday, there had been 47 murders this year. The city record of 58 was set in 1995.

One can only hope this is not a harbinger of what is coming to all American cash flow, not money dilution ability, ends. Sadly, for Camden there is no more hope.

The city has the nation's highest poverty rate with more than two residents in five living in poverty, census data show.

 

The big factories that once made Camden an industrial boomtown have been gone for a generation.

 

Over the past decade, revitalization efforts focused on expanding hospitals and universities, which brought some life to downtown but had a less discernible effect on neighborhoods where even the best-kept blocks have abandoned homes.

 

The city expects only $25 million of its $150 million next proposed budget to come from property taxes. Most of the rest is supplied by state aid - and that's declining.

Think massive ECB bailouts, which in the US are far more streamlined. As for the local residents who still are paying property taxes, it may be prudent to just take your real estate losses and move on. Or else...

In January 2011, the city government conducted massive layoffs, including nearly half the police department and about one-third of the firefighters.

 

Since then, all the laid-off public safety workers have been called back, but their numbers have fallen through attrition.

 

Now, there are 270 police officers, down from 450 in 2005 and 368 the day before the layoffs.

 

Police Chief Scott Thomson, who is slated to lead the Camden County Police Department's Metro Division, points to crime statistics for the two years before the layoffs that showed the crime declining.

 

He says it's because of intensive community policing efforts that came about when detectives were reassigned from desk jobs to patrols and the force was able to be more proactive.

 

With the smaller force, he said, walking and biking beats are used more sparingly.

In the meantime, the local cops are all preparing to bail as entitlement funding runs out

The Fraternal Order of Police lodge that represents Camden's rank-and-file officers is upset that they have not been presented with a formal plan.

 

Cappelli says officers in the new department would have base salaries that are the same or higher than what they make now - ranging from $31,000 for a rookie to about $80,000.

 

Officers' health insurance contributions would increase, and officers would also lose longevity and shift differential payments that combined can boost their pay up to 22 per cent.

 

The plan is to start hiring for the new force in October and have a mix of city and county police patrol the city during a training period before shutting down the city department sometime in the first few months of 2013.

The plan will not work. Good luck Camden: you will need it in your transformation to the first circle of US hell, soon to be joined by many more.

And here are some pictures of just what Dante would see in his modern descent into America.

Shocking crimes: A Camden police officer stands in the doorway of a home on August 22 in New Jersey's most impoverished city, where authorities say a 2-year-old boy was decapitated, apparently by his mother

Shocking crimes: A Camden police officer stands in the doorway of a home on August 22 in New Jersey's most impoverished city, where authorities say a 2-year-old boy was decapitated, apparently by his mother

Fight: A supporter of the Camden Police Department speaks during a hearing before the New Jersey Senate Judiciary Committee, in Trenton

Fight: A supporter of the Camden Police Department speaks during a hearing before the New Jersey Senate Judiciary Committee, in Trenton

Forces dwindling: There are now 270 police officers in Camden, down from 450 in 2005 and 368 the day before the layoffs

Forces dwindling: There are now 270 police officers in Camden, down from 450 in 2005 and 368 the day before the layoffs

Run down: Crack houses have sprung up amid the boarded-up factories and burned out houses in Camden

Run down: Crack houses have sprung up amid the boarded-up factories and burned out houses in Camden

 

Abject poverty: The unemployment rate in Camden skyrocketed from less than 9 per cent to more than 20 per cent during the recession

Abject poverty: The unemployment rate in Camden skyrocketed from less than 9 per cent to more than 20 per cent during the recession

Gone: Camden police officers will lose their jobs at the end of the year when the department is disbanded

Gone: Camden police officers will lose their jobs at the end of the year when the department is disbanded

 

Decay: The Camden police have struggled to keep up with the soaring murder rate, amid layoffs and budget cuts

Decay: The Camden police have struggled to keep up with the soaring murder rate, amid layoffs and budget cuts

Decay: Soaring unemployment and the flight of thousands of city residents has resulted in urban blight spreading across the city

Decay: Soaring unemployment and the flight of thousands of city residents has resulted in urban blight spreading across the city



Run-down: Residents look out over the gutter city where almost half of people are unemployed

Run-down: Residents look out over the gutter city where almost half of people are unemployed

 



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: New Jersey
KEYWORDS: bluezones; budget; camden; crime; leo; nj; taxandspend; urban
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To: SeekAndFind
Now, there are 270 police officers, down from 450 in 2005 and 368 the day before the layoffs.

In a free society, a city of 77,000 people shouldn't require 450 police officers, 368 police officers, or even 270 police officers. The sad fact is that Camden's crime rate was one of the worst in the Country even when it had 450 police officers, and while the crime rate has gotten slightly worse since the reductions in the police force, the slight uptick in the crime rate could be attributable to factors other than the number of police officers on the street.

To put things in perspective, the closest city to where I currently live has 80,000 people and a police force of 150 officers. The city where I used to live has one of the highest crime rates in the State of New York and it has about 190 officers for 75,000 people. New York City with 8,250,000 residents and an additional 2 to 3 million visitors/commuters on any given day has 34,500 police officers or one officer for every 239 residents; whereas Camden had one officer for every 171 people.

41 posted on 09/24/2012 11:14:30 AM PDT by Labyrinthos
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To: SeekAndFind

LOOKS LIKE HOME TO ME

42 posted on 09/24/2012 11:24:09 AM PDT by ZOOKER ( Exploring the fine line between cynicism and outright depression)
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To: US Navy Vet

Dern, I read the whole article thinking “Newark” for some reason. Still “moron” is a bit much don’t ya think?


43 posted on 09/24/2012 11:50:28 AM PDT by The Toll
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To: skinkinthegrass

East St. Louis, and much of St. Louis proper, and portions of north St. Louis County.

Of course, this isn’t new, every city has a portion of town that looks like Camden/Detroit.


44 posted on 09/24/2012 1:02:02 PM PDT by Molon Labbie (Prep. Now. Live Healthy, take your Shooting Iron daily.)
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To: SpaceBar

You are 100% correct. If you moved the present population of Camden to another city, it would be mere weeks before it looked like Camden.


45 posted on 09/24/2012 2:42:50 PM PDT by Venturer
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To: SeekAndFind
It looks like the next step in the process is to ship the residents of the city into Section 8 housing in the better surrounding communities, and increase their limits on the EBT cards.

That will fix the problems. Yeah. No doubt that is what the Dems are planning now as the fix...

46 posted on 09/24/2012 3:18:23 PM PDT by Gritty (This election represents the last exit ramp before the death spiral - Mark Steyn)
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To: Elendur

its the pensions and benefits...its unsustainable and the people know it.....


47 posted on 09/27/2012 11:25:21 PM PDT by cherry
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