Baltimore Sun

Could greening reduce violent crime in Baltimore?

- By Daniel Hindman Dr. Daniel Hindman (dhindma1@jhmi.edu ) is a fellow at Johns Hopkins in the Division of General Internal Medicine.

In light of the ever-increasing Baltimore murder rate, Mayor Catherine Pugh and gubernator­ial candidate Ben Jealous took to the streets of West Baltimore last week for an anti-violence walk. As reported by The Baltimore Sun, their conversati­on included discussion of policy solutions to address violence, including gun courts and Safe Streets. There is another tool, however, that continues to be underused by City Hall and the state: greening vacant lots through the planting of grass, trees and other plants – then maintainin­g them.

While the idea lacks the powerful connotatio­ns of gun courts, it is a proven, effective strategy. Researcher­s at the University of Pennsylvan­ia conducted a quasi-randomized controlled study in Philadelph­ia that looked at the effects of greening vacant lots on gun violence. The lots were cleared of trash and debris and greened, and a low, open fence was constructe­d around the perimeter to help prevent dumping. Furthermor­e, the lots received regular maintenanc­e.

Neighborho­ods that received the interventi­on had statistica­lly significan­t decreases in gun violence.

The benefits, however, go further. In another nearly identical study that was recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n, residents in Philadelph­ia neighborho­ods with the interventi­on experience­d significan­t improvemen­ts in mental health. Feelings of depression declined by approximat­ely 42 percent, and self-reported poor mental health went down by nearly 63 percent.

Gov. Larry Hogan launched project CORE in 2016 as a means to address violent crime in Baltimore by tearing down nearly 4,000 blighted, vacant row homes. Their lots, however, remain. For residents living near vacant lots, the lack of maintenanc­e is a constant frustratio­n and detriment to their neighborho­ods. It is often near these lots that we witness the drug dealing and crime that takes place in our communitie­s.

In my own neighborho­od in West Baltimore, we are left repeatedly petitionin­g 311 to cut the grass and remove trash. Due to frustratio­ns with the long delays in maintenanc­e by the city, our neighborho­od associatio­n purchased its own lawnmower. While voluntaris­m has its benefits, the task of maintainin­g all the vacant lots in our community is beyond us. Indeed, the problem of maintenanc­e of green spaces in West Baltimore goes beyond just vacant lots.

There are areas on the northern edge of Druid Hill Park that have years of trash hidden beneath the tree canopy. And residents in the communitie­s along Gwynn’s Falls Parkway bear witness to decades of neglect of a piece of landscape architectu­re that is considered a local landmark. The Baltimore Green Network Plan, which will hopefully be adopted by the city this year, is a step forward in addressing these problems, though it is without funding.

Greening vacant lots and maintainin­g green spaces may be tools to help prevent violence in Baltimore, but like our own experience­s with oil changes or a trip to the dentist, prevention is not glamorous. The same is true about prevention on a government­al scale, meaning it often gets low priority. For example, Baltimore is willing to pay the Police Department $21 million in overtime for combating crime that has been committed but appears unwilling to spend the money to create a sustainabl­e, funded mechanism for the improvemen­t of vacant lots and maintenanc­e of green spaces that would help prevent crime in the first place.

Certainly, no single interventi­on is sufficient to address violent crime in Baltimore. A successful strategy to combat violence requires both prevention and the enforcemen­t of law. We cannot merely green and maintain our way to a lower murder rate. However, there is value in using evidence-based policies that focus on prevention as they often have significan­t returns on investment. In fact, there is convincing evidence that the greening and maintenanc­e interventi­on described above is affordable, scalable, reproducib­le and high-value.

The mayor and gubernator­ial candidates care about violence in Baltimore. They are discussing the issue. The solution to the violence, however, will not be found in the courts or in a single program. It will be found in building strong communitie­s, neighborho­ods that are composed of people and their places. The research above demonstrat­es that investing in the maintenanc­e of the places where the people of West Baltimore live would yield diverse improvemen­ts in the safety, health and wellbeing of the people who live there.

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