Is the drug business going
to be good again in Coatesville just like in 2007?
By ERIC S. SMITH
esmith@dailylocal.com
In a letter dated April 28, 2006
concerning choosing a new chief for the City of Coatesville Police Department
District Attorney Joe Carroll wrote:
"Chief Bellizzzie did an
excellent job in what is probably the most difficult law enforcement position
on Chester County. The police department in Coatesville is understaffed and
overworked, and has been for many years."
That last sentence, “The police
department in Coatesville is understaffed and overworked, and has been for many
years.” was written when the Coatesville PD had more staff members than we
now have.
We cannot afford to lose police
officers in Coatesville; if anything we should be hiring additional officers.
SEE LETTER BELOW
The new SEPTA and Amtrak train station will be here
sometime in 2015. The Marriot Courtyard Hotel is open in Coatesville. The
Velodrome is in the pipeline.
BY MICHAEL N. PRICE
mprice@dailylocal.com
Thursday, May 10,2012
From Chester County District Attorney Tom Hogan:
"Violent crimes
like this are a stark reminder of why Coatesville needs a strong and fully
staffed police department," SEE:
January 26, 2012|By Kathleen Brady Shea, Inquirer Staff
Writer
Coatesville has a Marriott
Courtyard Hotel and a new train station and the National Velodrome is coming.
Instead of focusing on bringing
new revenue to Coatesville City Manager Gary Rawlings is focused on cost
cutting.
Less police
= More crime
= People and businesses moving out
of Coatesville
= Less tax revenue
= Less police
A downward spiral
Mr. Rawlings is poised to
balance the budget on the backs of the City of Coatesville Police.
But just when Coatesville is finally coming back is not the time to give our city back to the drug dealers and national gangs.
In 2008 a bunch of Coatesville retail
businesses had enough of the armed robberies and closed but some long time Coatesville businesses waited for the "Bloc of Four's" inferno of terror to end.
But if a storeowner has a gun pointed to his head while his cash register is
emptied one more time he might decide that it's time to close up.
Armed robberies, muggings, news of street shootouts and people
waiting in traffic jams caused by drug sales in the street doesn't fit with
attracting legitimate businesses to Coatesville. If Mr. Rawling's PD reduction policies put drug dealers
back in control of Coatesville's streets businesses looking at
Western Chester County might skip over Coatesville.
Hopefully the Coatesville City
Council will have the good sense to ignore Rawlings and take money out of the
water authority sale fund to keep police working. And maybe the city council
will admit that hiring Rawlings was a big mistake, buy out his contract and
send him off to play golf. Who knows, maybe that’s what he had in mind when he
came here.
DISTRICT ATTORNEY JOE CARROLL'S LETTER
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