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I'm very sorry to tell you this, but I saw this similar decline happen to the Polytechnic neighborhood back in the 1970s. When the elderly neighbors started dying off, the surviving family members either sold the homes cheap just to get rid of them quickly or sold them to property management companies who turned them into rental properties. The rental properties then were occupied by families who didn't give a sh** about keeping up the lawn or the house in good condition, parked cars in the yards, generally were the type of people who tended toward criminal activity, you know the type as well as I do. The 'white flight' into the suburbs in Poly during the 1970s was incontrovertible evidence of this phenomenon.
A neighborhood with a high percentage of rental properties, particularly those owned by 'silent' landlords or landlords who reside in other states, in my opinion, contributes more to the decline of a middle class neighborhood into a slum than any other factor.
Anybody who thinks that they can move to another neighborhood and escape this phenomenon has got another think coming. If you live in a neighborhood long enough, the older people will die off and the rental properties will take over the neighborhood and the criminal and otherwise undesirable element will take over the area, whether you like it or not. All you have to do is go to North Richland Hills and see what's happened there. In the 1970s, everybody in Poly thought that area would never decline, but look what's happened there, the area has aged forty years and time has taken its toll.
The suburbs aren't immune to this phenomenon, either. With the skyrocketing rate of foreclosures due to the excessively permissive lending practices of the late 2000s, the banks are likely to turn foreclosed properties into rentals as well. |
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Call 9-1-1 immediately, if you see any individual who fits the following descriptions:
• teens, young adults, or adults, male or female, walking the streets after sunset
• anyone walking your street wearing baggy pants, sports jerseys, or any clothing or jewelry which could even remotely suggest gang affiliation or street culture
• any individual walking your street that you may not recognize as a neighbor
• any vehicle which can be heard a block away or whose driver displays no respect for posted street signs and posted neighborhood speed
• any vehicle which drives too slowly down your streets as if casing properties
• any individual or group which may be drinking in posted parks or frequenting park areas after sunset
• any residence where frequent nightly traffic comes and goes never staying for more than 10 or 15 minutes
CALL (817) 335-4222 NOT 9-1-1 for these complaints. 9-1-1 is for EMERGENCIES ONLY. (817) 335-4222 is the regular Fort Worth Police Department telephone number. 9-1-1 is not for routine and frivolous complaints like those described above. 9-1-1 is intended for life-threatening emergencies. Sports jerseys, by the way, are not automatic signs of gang affiliation. Anybody has the right to walk the streets after sunset, especially if they want to exercise in the summer to avoid the heat. This does not imply that they are criminals. A vehicle driving slowly down a street may be a visitor who is trying to find a house they are visiting for the first time; they are not necessarily a suspicious or criminal person.
Some of the activity you are describing is legitimate criminal or unsavory behavior. However, some of the behavior you are describing is not, and seems to indicate paranoia or perhaps even a bit of racism on your part.
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