Author Archives: danafritz48

B*PAC Meeting March 26th, 2011

B*PAC
Buttercup Park Advisory Council
Quarterly Meeting
Saturday…March 26, 2011
Margate Park Field House
9:30-11:00am

You are invited to our first meeting of the New Year:

Agenda to include:

  • Nomination & Election of new officers:
  • Preview of the design for the new Buttercup Park
  • Collection of yearly dues: $10
  • Treasurer report
  • Activity report
  • New business

We hope to see you!

…in the words of Alderman Mary Ann Smith
“People who use the Parks…Own the Parks”

It’s your park…your community…take ownership!

TXT2TIP program

TXT2TIP is  a program from the Chicago Police Department that allows citizens to report crime to the police by sending a text message from their cellular phones.  Click on the pages below for larger versions.  Follow this link for more information on the Chicago Police Department website.

The CHICAGO Plan


The CHICAGO Plan is a Chicago Police Department initiative that works with the business community to attack crime and gang offenses and to help make Chicago a safer city.

The CHICAGO Plan asks business owners across the city to register their privately owned closed circuit security camera systems and devices. As the Police Department responds to criminal incidents in the community, they can use any information or footage gathered from these security cameras to assist business owners and community members in the apprehension and prosecution of the criminals involved.

There are two ways that you can register:

  1. Complete the Chicago Plan form online via the Chicago Police Department’s CLEARpath webpage at www.chicagopolice.org.
  2. Download and complete the Chicago Plan Form at your local district police station. Completed forms can be turned in to your District’s Community Policing Office or faxed to the Chicago Police Department CAPS Project Office at (312) 745-1099.

Click here for more information on the CHICAGO Plan, and remember security cameras can be linked into the City’s 911/ 311 call center through the Private Sector Camera Initiative as well.

New Safety Initiative Targets Troubled Areas

Below is an excerpt from Alderman Smith’s e-newsletter on a new and innovative safety initiative in the 48th Ward.  Follow this link to receive the Alderman’s newsletter directly.

Alderman Smith is using discretionary funds to target troubled areas in the 48th Ward. She has contracted off-duty police to concentrate on three chronic problem locations: the intersection of Winthrop and Winona, Thorndale around the Red Line station and Sheridan Road from Lawrence to Margate Terrace.

The off-duty officers are working in conjunction with the local police district and Board of Education security and focusing their efforts at the dismissal times of schools located in these areas. They are monitoring the flow of traffic, including pedestrian traffic, bringing police attention to any problems or potential problems during these periods and providing suggestions on how to better enhance the safety of these areas.

The goal of this project is to bring additional resources to areas where public safety problems have persisted despite the application of normally successful strategies. It is not designed to minimize or replace the hard work of the Chicago Police and Chicago Public Schools security, or the efforts of the community, but rather to supplement those efforts. Initial reports from the officers and nearby school principals are encouraging. They believe the presence of the off-duty officers has greatly reduced the unsavory elements that typically inhabit these areas after school.

To continue this success, the officers need information from the community. You can help by calling 911 to report illegal and suspicious activity and by attending the local CAPS meetings to provide feedback and exchange information with your neighbors and the police. When calling 911, please remember that information given to the police is kept confidential, and you can choose to remain anonymous.

How to Describe a Suspect

One of the easiest and most important ways for citizens to help stop crime and catch criminals is by providing timely, accurate information to the police.  The files below illustrate how to give the best information possible to police when describing a suspect.  Along with 911 and Beat meetings, chronic community concerns can now be reported online using this tool on the CPD website as well.  This tool should not be used to report issues that need an immediate police response.  Those problems should still be reported directly to 911.

“Retaking the street”

Uptown resident Ed Kuske’s efforts organizing Neighborhood Watches on Sheridan Road were recently featured by WBEZ as part of a story on public safety.  Follow this link to read the story.  For additional information on Ed’s neighborhood watches and others throughout Uptown click here and here.

Project Blue Lights

A holiday message from the Chicago Police Department:

Across the United States, 150 police officers have died in the line of duty this year.  The Chicago Police Department alone has lost 5 police officers in the line of duty.  During this holiday season, let’s honor our fallen officers by participating in Project Blue Lights.   Through this program, citizens are encouraged to display blue lights in their holiday decorations to remember law enforcement officers who have fallen, as well as those working tirelessly to keep all of us safe.  Let’s show our support!

New Buttercup Design

Feel free to leave your thoughts on the new Buttercup Park design, courtesy of the Buttercup Park Advisory Committee, in the comments section below.

(Click the image for a larger view.)

Private Sector Camera Initiative

Security cameras can protect your home and business.  They deter crime from occurring and assist in solving crimes that have occurred.  Now the City is working with citizens to tie their private security cameras into the City’s 911 call center, run by the Office of Emergency Management and Communication (OEMC).  Exterior surveillance cameras tied into OEMC can be accessed during an emergency to provide first responders with information pertinent to the situation. Alderman Smith utilized this program at the public schools in the 48th Ward to great success.  If you already have security cameras, or are thinking of installing security cameras, click on the brochure below or call OEMC at 312-746-9111 for more information.

Buttercup Design Proposals

The Buttercup Park Advisory Committee has been hard at work improving Buttercup, making it a safer and more inviting place to play.  Below are two proposed redesigns of the park, based on community input from a charette held earlier this year.  Please take a moment to review the two designs and leave your thoughts in the comments section.

(Click the images for larger views.)