
In the "My Philadelphia" contest, students from Philadelphia shared their visions of the city. Check out the winning entries.

In the "My Philadelphia" contest, students from Philadelphia shared their visions of the city. Check out the winning entries.
Nov. 25, 2007
The number tattooed on everyone’s psyche is 406. That’s the total of homicides in the city in 2006, the highest in a decade.
But that is just the beginning of the crime story in Philadelphia.
In 2006, we also had 11,000 or so robberies, about 11,000 serious assaults, nearly 11,500 burglaries and 38,000 thefts. Add to that the 11,600 motor vehicle thefts, the 821 rapes, and the 200-plus arsons and what have you got?
That’s close to 85,000 serious crimes – also known as felonies – committed in one 12-month period in Philadelphia.
Let’s call the people who committed these 85,000 crimes the bad guys.
Against them, we – the citizens – have arrayed about 7,000 police, and an additional 5,000 city employees engaged in criminal justice: prosecutors, prison guards, probation and parole employees, to name the major categories.
Let’s call them the good guys.
The central question is: How do we deploy and use our good guys to most effectively and efficiently contain the bad guys? And let us be realistic: No one expects crime to disappear. There has been crime since Cain slew Abel.
But, the mission of Mayor-elect Michael Nutter is clear. Politically, he is committed to doing something about the murder rate. His broader mandate is to lower the frequency and severity of crime.
It won’t be easy because of the sheer volume of crime; the brisk drug trade; the spread of handguns; the breakdowns of family and neighborhood order; the high cost of arresting, prosecuting and jailing bad guys.
But, here is where you start:
Prevention, parenting:
Support for programs that intervene with youth and try to counter the root causes of violence is high. So is frustration with weak, permissive parents.
(Illustration by Tim Ogline)