Latest news with #NYPDQualityofLifeDivision


CBS News
10-04-2025
- Politics
- CBS News
NYC Mayor Adams announces new NYPD Quality of Life Division
New York City Mayor Eric Adams and Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch announced Thursday the creation of a new NYPD Quality of Life Division. "We will not tolerate an atmosphere of anything and everything goes," Adams said. "We are going to have a city that's clean and safe. The Quality of Life Division will begin operation next Monday with a pilot program in five precincts and one housing PSA area." The new division will combine existing NYPD community roles like neighborhood coordination officers, youth coordination officers, and traffic safety officers into specialized "Q-Teams" to address quality of life problems in those communities like noise violations, abandoned vehicles, homeless encampments and outdoor drug use. "Issues like illegal vending, substance use, abandoned vehicles, illegal mopeds and reckless driving and more have persisted for far too long, and we want to ensure that we continue to move our city in the right direction," Adams said. Some critics worry it's reminiscent of the "broken windows" policing strategy under former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, and have concerns it will unfairly target marginalized communities. "When you're rolling out new programs, you know, there's a lot of concerns. So what we have to do is watch, wait and see, because it all changes when the rubber meets the road," one person said. "Some have criticized this as a return to zero tolerance policing, which is a complete mischaracterization of what we're doing here. We are addressing quality of life issues, yes, but this is different policy for a different purpose. In 2025, quality of-life enforcement is not about preventing more serious crimes. It is about improving quality of life. It's about being responsive to actual community complaints and fixing the very real issues people are dealing with every day. That is why we're are doing this," NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said. "The vast majority of New Yorkers have never been the victim of a crime. In fact, most of them have never even witnessed a crime, but many of them have struggled to find parking because abandoned vehicles are taking up spots in the neighborhood, or had to jump out of the way for an e-bike on the sidewalk, or avoided walking through a park with their kids because people were there openly using drugs. These encounters make people feel less safe." Adams said that, along with the new division, the NYPD is also launching Q-Stat, a program modeled after CompStat, which tracks crimes and uses the data to adjust police deployment. It will track 311 complaints the way CompStat tracks major crimes. "We are going to use the same recipe for success this time to address quality of life issues. Q-Stat will help us track and tackle quality of life issues using real-time data and deployment," Adams said. The pilot programs will take place in the 13th, 40th, 60th 75th and 101st precincts along with Public Service Area 1. The city says there's no extra cost. The division is being built through internal restructuring. If the pilot program will roll out citywide if the pilot proves effective. During his announcement, Adams touted five straight quarters of decreasing crime since Jan. 1, 2024. "We are shattering crime records. The first three months of this year so the lowest number of shootings in recorded history," Adams said. "Since the start of modern crime tracking there has never been this few number of shootings in any quarter in any year." "Every New Yorker deserves to feel safe, and the Quality of Life Division will take a direct approach to address these issues impacting our streets and public housing developments," Tisch said.

Yahoo
30-01-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
New NYPD unit to crack down on quality-of-life offenses: Commissioner Jessica Tisch
The NYPD, which under Mayor Adams has re-emphasized 'broken windows' policing, is about to focus even more on quality-of-life offenses as a way of preventing more serious crime, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said Thursday. A newly-formed citywide NYPD Quality of Life Division, run by a chief, will take shape in the coming weeks, Tisch said, with officers in each command assigned to 'Q teams.' Supervisors will be called to regular Q Stat meetings modeled after Compstat, the department's method of tracking crimes in real time, allocating resources to preventing more crime and holding commanders accountable for their strategies. Tisch, speaking at the annual State of the NYPD breakfast in Midtown, said the quality-of-life offenses such as aggressive panhandling, unlicensed street vending, public urination and abandoned vehicles give 'the impression of an unsafe community.' 'For too long we asked our cops to correct these conditions without sufficient direction,' Tisch said. 'No more. These Q Stat meetings will bring our quality-of-life work into much greater focus, more accurately measure our effectiveness and re-center our approach to public safety.' Broken windows policing was a hallmark of Bill Bratton during his first term as police commissioner 30 years ago. Critics through the years have criticized the approach as encouraging racial profiling, with residents in largely Black and Hispanic communities more likely to be summonsed for low-level offenses or arrested. The NYPD has repeatedly denied it engages in racial profiling and has argued they are merely responding to complaints from New Yorkers, including Blacks and Hispanics. In her speech, Tisch again lamented the rise in the number of repeat offenders who she says are too often released without bail. She emphasized the need to work with prosecutors and legislators to tweak the 2020 discovery laws so that more time is allowed for police and prosecutors to gather the evidence that must be turned over to defense lawyers. She also said a new NYPD academy class sworn in Wednesday will benefit from an improved training curriculum to help them better respond to subway incidents involving the mentally ill. 'Our first priority is to protect life,' she said. 'And to put it bluntly our cops need better tactics.' At the same time, starting with a Transit District in Queens, cops will more consistently enforce subway rules including the ones prohibiting smoking and riders laying across multiple seats. The move follows a series of initiatives aimed at pushing down subway crime and making riders feel safer. Last week, as part of a plan announced by Gov. Hochul, the NYPD started assigning two cops to every train in the city overnight. Earlier in the month, Tisch moved more than 200 cops into subway patrols, noting they will be on the trains and platforms, where 78% of the crime happens. Serious subway crime dropped 6% last year, but the system has been rocked by a series of random attacks, most notably the murder of a homeless woman Debrina Kawam, 57, who was set on fire in Coney Island last month, allegedly by Sebastian Zapeta, 33.