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01/25/05
A Day in
the Life in North Oak Cliff
I awake to find several urgent e-mails from neighbors alerting me to
three separate, serious criminal incidents that occurred in the last couple of
days here in North Oak Cliff. I read and quickly
dispatch them to neighbors who share my concerns about our rising crime rate,
then hop into the car to take my 5 year
old to school. I back out of my driveway
onto our street, Winnetka Avenue, the street where Oscar Sanchez was kidnapped
last week.
I dodge three major potholes on the way to I-35, wait briefly at a
malfunctioning red light, then head south to the private school in DeSoto where
we enrolled at great financial sacrifice out of concerns about the quality of
education on offer at our local DISD elementary. Along
our last leg to school, we drive past an apartment complex at Old Hickory and
Wheatland Road, the scene of the first quadruple murder of 2005.
My daughter safely in the classroom, I return to Oak Cliff and stop for coffee
in the Bishop Arts District, meeting up with friends who relate details about
yet another carjacking, this time about 500 yards around the corner from where
we live. Coffee in hand, I head back to my office in my restored, 95-year-old
home, driving past a mountain of trash bags laying in the street along the
curbside of an empty house - bags the City agreed to collect as a "courtesy"
more than three weeks ago.
Settling in, I call code compliance for a status update on our block's recent
code complaints against my next-door neighbor's conversion of a single-family,
historic home into a raucous apartment building. I learn that the officer who
initially inspected the premises works for the wrong division of code
enforcement - and, even though he's seen firsthand the two kitchens and
apartment doors they've installed, the proper code department can't act on his
inspection unless it, too, sees the violations firsthand. Not surprisingly, my
neighbors refuse to cooperate. This, apparently, takes me back to square one -
helping ensure that the overcrowding, 24/7 traffic, holiday gunfire and
chest-thumping rap is here to stay.
On my lunch hour, I drop by a local merchant's shop to leave an item for
repair and have a friendly mug of tea. As we sip, she tells me that she's taken
to clutching a can of tear gas as she leaves her shop because the neighborhood
is just too creepy at night these days. Taking her cue, I make a mental note to
procure some mace for the car.
My daughter
climbs into the car after school, asking to go to Kidd
Springs Park to see the ducks. It's a beautiful day - sunny and bright - but we
head home instead. (On our last visit to the park, we found used needles and
condoms laying by the small kiddie playground, then witnessed what appeared to
be a cash-for-drugs exchange in the cul de sac in front of the community
center.)
Homework done, I take my kid to ballet -
this time, two blocks from the Sanchez kidnapping site. I exchange greetings
with her ballet teacher, who tells me that she's getting increasingly scared
about keeping her studio open late into the evening - and reports two apparently
related armed carjacking incidents that occurred two streets over in the other
direction over the last week. As she moves to
the barre, she tells me she's thinking of shifting some of her late-hour
students to Sunday afternoon because her husband fears her leaving her studio
after dark.
After ballet, I realize that I need gas before tomorrow's drive to school -- but
it's after dark and I have my daughter with me in the car. Standing at the pump
with keys in hand and my child in her booster seat leaves me too vulnerable, I
calculate, so I elect to leave my home early tomorrow to fill up in broad
daylight. Driving by the gas station, I'm again tempted to fill up and be done
with it. While I wait to turn left into the gas station, four young men dripping
gold chains climb out of a car at the closest pump, blaring obscenity-laden
music so loud I can't hear my own radio and hassling a lone man at another pump.
I decide my first instincts were correct and, again, point the car toward home.
Daughter asleep in bed and dishes done, I turn on the nightly news.
As I settle into my chair, I hear a couple of shots go off a block or two
away. I call 911, exactly as my neighbors and I
did repeatedly to no effect on New Year's Eve when tenants of the newly minted
apartments next door shot into the air for hours on end.
I return to my chair just in time to catch the latest punches being
thrown in the WWF wrestling match the strong mayor proposal has become. Both
sides posture, both sides dig in their heels, both sides predict gloom and doom
if the other guys win.
As I turn off the set and head for bed, I wonder for the thousandth time how
much worse it has to get before the shouting stops and we see real progress on
the problems facing us here in North Oak Cliff. Just how many car
jackings, burglaries, rapes or shootings will we endure before either
side actually does something that results in measurable change?
How many potholes will I have to plunge into before the roads get fixed? How
many fresh multiple-homicide sites will we drive past? How low will DISD
standards eventually sink before changes are made that would allow us to visit
local school campuses without walking through metal detectors or finding
teacher misspellings on the board?
How much trash has to pile up before the
city actually does make a real-time courtesy collection? How long before the two
sides of code compliance can communicate to address basic zoning and code
violations? How much time has to pass before I can again take my daughter to our
public park without witnessing a drug deal or finding used hypodermics? When
will my friends and I again be able to leave our homes and businesses after dark
without fear?
As my head hits the pillow, I realize with
crystal clarity that our city officials are too busy burning their political
capital over their various positions on the Blackwood proposal to attend to
actual city business here south of the Trinity. Drifting to sleep, I'm certain
that I'm in for a lot more days like today.
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