Los Angeles Times

Residents say curfew needed at ‘felony park’

Neighbors in Pacific Beach say nighttime restrictio­ns would help curb crime.

- By David Garrick Garrick writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — Frustrated Pacific Beach residents are lobbying for a curfew for Fanuel Park, which is frequently called “felony park” because of drug dealing, prostituti­on, bicycle thefts and other problems.

Residents launched their campaign for a nighttime curfew shortly after San Diego approved curfews in March for five other city parks facing similar problems with drugs, vandalism and other illegal activity.

More than 500 residents have signed a petition in support of a curfew that would be in effect from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. The parking lot adjacent to Fanuel Park is already closed from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m.

Police say curfews can be effective in crime reduction because they limit opportunit­ies for illegal activity and provide officers with another enforcemen­t tool.

The curfews the City Council approved in March increased the number of city parks with curfews to more than 20. Most are in San Diego’s urban core. Fanuel Park would be one of the first coastal parks with a curfew.

Community leaders and residents say a curfew is badly needed in the park, where there have been nearly 100 criminal incidents reported to police since January.

Incidents reported in the park or within 1,000 feet of it include 36 drug incidents, 13 thefts, eight burglaries, four prostituti­on arrests, three cases of battery and one assault with a deadly weapon.

“It’s a really unsavory situation, and it’s been going on for years,” said Brian White, president of the Pacific Beach Town Council. “We think a curfew can make a big difference.”

The park is known for open drug dealing, intravenou­s drug use and bicycle thefts. The stolen bikes are often disassembl­ed so they can be sold for parts. Needles have frequently been found near the park’s bathrooms and in grass where children play.

White said the situation is a health and safety risk for visitors and neighbors to the park, which is bordered on three sides by housing and on the fourth side by Mission Bay.

Residents in the Bay Scene condominiu­m complex, next to the park, have endorsed the curfew campaign.

“Over the past several years, our residents have seen an increase in gang activity, drug dealing, intravenou­s drug use, discarded needles, litter, vandalism and prostituti­on in the park,” said Robert Citrano, president of the Bay Scene Homeowners Assn.

Though San Diego has a large homeless population living near the city’s beaches, White said he doesn’t believe anyone lives in Fanuel Park. He said the park has steadily become a magnet for crime.

Nearby resident Sandy Algra said she considers the park a local treasure. Her father, Tom Gade, a San Diego city councilman in the late 1970s, helped get the land set aside.

But Algra said a lack of police presence in recent years has made the park dangerous at night, when it often serves as a convenient meeting place for people engaged in illegal activity.

“I love Fanuel Park like it’s my own backyard,” said Algra, who has lived her entire life in Mission Beach and Crown Point.

“I strongly dislike the misnomer of ‘felony park,’ but it’s getting that name for a reason.”

The Mission Bay Park Committee voted in favor of the proposed curfew this month.

The city’s Parks and Recreation Board is expected to consider the proposal early next year.

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