San Diego Union-Tribune

BREAK-INS AT LA JOLLA BUSINESSES WORRY MERCHANTS

- BY ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON Mackin-Solomon writes for the U-T Community Press.

In the wake of several break-ins at La Jolla businesses in the past few months, the La Jolla Village Merchants Associatio­n updated its strategic plan to add a safety and security component at its recent meeting online. The group also plans to work with the city of San Diego and the police to improve communicat­ion among businesses to help catch and deter burglars.

La Jolla’s Bang & Olufsen high-end consumer electronic­s store on Girard Avenue accounted for four of the 24 burglaries in The Village in 2021 and early 2022.

“I have been in San Diego for a little over a year now and we have had four breakins,” said Bang & Olufsen manager and LJVMA board member Nicole Perez. “Coming from San Francisco, this is not something I experience­d, nor what I expected in San Diego, in La Jolla in particular. I’m concerned.”

Store managers met recently with representa­tives of the San Diego Police Department and City Council District 1, which includes La Jolla.

Representi­ng Councilmem­ber Joe LaCava, Steve Hadley said: “The police tell me that on one occasion, a person without housing here in The Village saw one of these burglaries in progress and called the police before the alarms went off . ... These burglars don’t stay more than two minutes, so when the police arrived, even with the advance warning, they were gone. But the police are addressing it. We have discussed how to harden

that particular shop and other things the city and police might do if they are able to help out.”

SDPD representa­tives were not at the meeting.

Echoing the concern, La

Jolla Concours d’Elegance chairman Michael Dorvillier said he had an office in The Village with a storage facility. “My storage facility on the bottom floor was broken into,” he said. “They are looking for stuff in these storage bins.”

In the parking garage of another Village office building in which he parked cars, “a group of guys came in a black car with black-tinted windows, wearing hoodies and they did a complete, thorough check of the entire parking structure,” Dorvillier said. “That’s out there and that’s happening. They know when you call the police, it is going to take time to get here. It’s becoming a huge problem in The Village.”

Summer Shoemaker, general manager of the La Valencia Hotel on Prospect Street, said the hotel’s valet parking lot is unguarded and that in the last few days of December, “we had four vehicles broken into in our valet parking lot ... and four vehicles had their tires slashed. It was a very unfortunat­e event.”

The LJVMA board voted to add a “merchant concern, safety and security” component to the annual strategic plan, which guides the board in its decision-making and planning for the coming year. The action makes safety and security a strategic topic so the group can discuss ways to make merchants safer and help them network to catch burglars.

The associatio­n’s executive director, Jodi Rudick, said the city and the board “need to elevate this issue more . ... I’m hearing so much more than the statistics are showing, so I know we need to have this conversati­on and find a solution.”

The La Jolla Village Merchants Associatio­n next meets at 4 p.m. Feb. 9. Learn more at lajollabyt­hesea.com.

 ?? ELISABETH FRAUSTO U-T COMMUNITY PRESS ?? A recent break-in left La Jolla’s Bang & Olufsen with a broken window.
ELISABETH FRAUSTO U-T COMMUNITY PRESS A recent break-in left La Jolla’s Bang & Olufsen with a broken window.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States