πŸ› The Cambridge Record
Agenda Items β–Έ Policy Orders

POR 2017-89

Asked the City Manager to consult with the Acting Police Commissioner with a view toward piloting a Cambridge Police …

How it started
Proposed by Councillors Simmons and McGovern β€” a formal request from the Council to the administration.
What happened
βœ… Order adopted β€” the Council's request now goes to the City Manager. (Order adopted as amended Β· Mar 27, 2017)

Present and voting at this meeting (9)

  • Craig A. Kelley
  • David Maher
  • Dennis Carlone
  • E. Denise Simmons
  • Jan Devereux
  • Leland Cheung
  • Marc McGovern
  • Nadeem Mazen
  • Timothy J. Toomey
Adopted by voice vote. A voice vote records the outcome, not individual positions β€” no member's yes or no is on the record (though a member can ask to be recorded in the negative in the minutes). Showing the members who cast recorded votes at this meeting. Rule 6 requires a roll call for spending over $50 or on any member's request; state law requires one for every vote when a member participates remotely. Β· photos: City of Cambridge
What’s next
βŒ› Waiting on the answer β€” the administration has not yet reported back.
πŸ” Audit this page against the city's record β€” five checks, ~10 minutes; two independent audits mark it verified. How auditing works
The document Agenda item attachment Β· 2 pages

O-3

ORIGINAL ORDER

In the years since the Cambridge Police Department relocated its headquarters from 5 Western Avenue to the new facility at 125 Sixth Street in East Cambridge, there has been a growing public perception that Central Square suffers from an increased amount of crime and people engaging in undesirable behavior, particularly during the evening hours in and around Carl Barron Plaza; and Members of the community have repeatedly raised concerns with the City about this neighborhood, lamenting that many families and senior citizens steer clear of the area because they feel unsafe walking through Central Square due to the panhandling and other behaviors of many people who tend to congregate in Carl Barron Plaza; and In response to these community concerns, the Cambridge Police have provided repeated assurances that there is a steady police presence in Central Square, that officers in uniform are routinely covering this beat, and that Central Square is just as safe, and the police response there just as swift, as when the Cambridge Police Department was located on Western Avenue; and True as these repeated assurances may be, the public’s perception of Central Square as an unsafe neighborhood best to be avoided remains a steep and significant hurdle that must be effectively addressed if the City is truly serious about working to revitalize this most important district; and There remains a vocal public desire for a more robust, more visible police presence, and many residents and business owners have urged for the installation of a physical Cambridge Police outpost situated in Carl Barron Plaza, which would provide an unmistakable signal that the City is making an aggressive effort to revitalize Central Square and provide a greater sense of safety to all who would come to this area; and When this has been discussed in years past, Cambridge Police representatives had advised that such an outpost would be both unnecessary and redundant to the police presence already operating in the Square, yet the psychological comfort such an outpost could provide to business owners, business patrons, and pedestrians alike can no longer be overlooked or easily dismissed; now therefore be it ORDERED: That the City Manager be and hereby is requested to consult with the Acting Police Commissioner with a view toward piloting a Cambridge Police outpost located in Carl Barron Plaza, to be ready for operation by Summer 2017, and to report back to the City Council on this matter in a timely manner.