UPDATE (10/1/14):
Today, I drove by the Troy PD patrol car spot I mentioned in the
following post written last month. There’s a cruiser there again, in the
same low (if any) crime area. This time, the officer inhabiting the
vehicle isn’t just idly watching traffic go by while nefarious
activities go on in some of the surrounding blocks. He wasn’t watching
the street at all. I circled around the block and checked to be sure
what I saw the first time was accurate. Yep. He was busy reading. Oh,
and protecting and defending, too, I’m sure.
I had to pay a visit to an Adirondack Tire Center in Troy’s
Lansingburgh section today. Not much of a way to begin a commentary, but
it’s the reason I noticed what I noticed. A Troy Police Department
cruiser sitting in the parking lot of an abandoned gas station across
the street.
I had seen the same thing while driving down that same street a day
earlier. Under many circumstances it would be an unremarkable sight
either time. This time it caught my eye, however, because I remembered
Chief John Tedesco several weeks ago announcing an expanded police
presence in the wake of numerous outbreaks of arson, shootings and
stabbings in that city neighborhood.
If so, this particular deployment was a waste of the cop’s time and my tax money.
That stretch of 2nd Street is anything but a hotbed of illicit
activity. It’s a commercial strip, just south of Powers Park. A smarter
place to be would be about four blocks north and one block east. That’s
where you’re getting into the sections of open-air drug markets and
plywood-studded deteriorating buildings that seem to attract arsonists
and other assholes.
Unless the intent of stationing a patrol car on that quiet section of
2nd Street was to catch the occasional speeder or scare off any
out-of-towners headed deeper into the ‘Burgh for a drug buy, it doesn’t
make much sense. We already have too many spots in the City of Troy
where patrol cars are stationed to catch errant motorists while ignoring
obvious drug activity in areas the police have, in effect, surrendered
to crooks.
Our city's cops have been trained for better things. They
are good cops who, I am quite sure, would rather be putting their energy and training to better use. Let them.