Residents already planning for Fourth
Alex Coolman
WEST NEWPORT -- Resident concerns about having enough time to prepare
for Fourth of July revelry have inspired a community association to take
up the subject tonight.
A forum held by the West Newport Beach Assn. will include
representatives from the police department. The meeting is an annual
tradition, said association president Alan Silcock, but it doesn’t
usually take place so early in the year.
Silcock said the group stepped up its schedule because residents said
the old meeting time in June didn’t give them enough time to get ready
for the annual crush of holiday partyers.
“That’s pretty late [in the year],” he said. “They wanted to have a
dialogue with the police department earlier so there could be an exchange
of ideas.”
Areas of Newport Beach near the water are typically the site of
considerable Independence Day partying, with a correspondingly
considerable level of arrests.
In the 1980s, police said, it was common for 300 to 400 people to be
arrested in Newport Beach over a particularly boisterous holiday weekend.
These days, though, the numbers are much lower. In the four days
leading up to July 4, 2000, cops collared about 150 people on
party-related arrests.
“Basically, that’s what we have to measure success,” said Sgt. Jim
Kaminsky, an officer who works on the “problem-oriented policing” program
for West Newport and will attend tonight’s forum.
But low arrest levels aren’t the only criteria the police -- or the
community -- cares about.
What matters, said both Silcock and Kaminsky, is the effort to come up
with a policing approach that not only lowers arrest levels but also
produces a moderately civilized holiday party scene.
Silcock said it’s that second goal that doesn’t seem to have been met
yet.
“Overall, it went pretty well last year,” he said of the Fourth of
July holiday. “The residents understand that and accept that, but they’re
a little upset about people urinating in the streets,” vomiting in yards
and otherwise behaving like drunken boors.
Silcock said he hopes to find out what solutions could address those
problems at tonight’s forum.
“Could they bring in porta-potties? I don’t know. It’s a good idea,
maybe,” he said.
Kaminsky said the department takes public obnoxiousness seriously,
even if it’s just a drunk answering the call of nature in an alley.
“We take the stance that while we don’t mind anybody having a party,
we want everyone to enjoy the Fourth in a safe manner,” Kaminsky said.
“If laws are broken, we have to enforce the law.”
Whether the panel results in any dramatic changes of the police’s
enforcement approach, Silcock said he thinks there’s value in airing
resident’s opinions.
“It’s a matter of letting people vent,” he said. “Let them talk with
each other and let them listen to each other.”
FYI
The meeting on the Fourth of July will take place at 7 p.m. in the
Friends Meeting Room of the Newport Beach Public Library, 1000 Avocado
Ave.
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