RWD_p002

RT05122016

2 times • MAY 12, 2016 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT www.qns.com SIGNS POINT OF SAFETY 104th Precinct touts reduced speeds through use of portable signage What’s the buzz? 104th Precinct removes 20,000 bees from Ridgewood tree By Anthony Giudice agiudice@ridgewoodtimes.com @A_GiudiceReport The 104th Precinct was creating a real buzz around Ridgewood on the morning of May 9. In the city’s first bee swarm call of the year, the 104th Precinct helped remove nearly 20,000 bees from a tree at Grandview and Greene avenues, with the help of the NYPD Bees unit. “We had the prestige of being the first precinct this year to have a bee job,” said Captain Mark Wachter, 104th Precinct commanding officer, at the 104th Precinct Community Council meeting on May 10 in Maspeth. “We have our own beekeeper. We actually have one of the beekeepers working for me at the precinct.” By Anthony Giudice agiudice@ridgewoodtimes.com @A_GiudiceReport As the signs say, ‘Your Speed:’ is going down, in Ridgewood, Glendale and Maspeth according to the 104th Precinct’s commanding officer. In an attempt to reduce speeding throughout the precinct, portable speed signs have been placed at locations where people have been known to speed. And the program is seeing results. “We are the only precinct right now in the borough that has these,” Captain Mark Wachter said at the 104th Precinct Community Council meeting on Tuesday night in Maspeth. “Really what I’ve been doing is putting them in areas where we are seeing an increase where, believe it or not, we are getting speeding enforcement. By putting the sign there we’re probably writing less speeding summonses in that area.” The speed signs have been periodically moving around the precinct to where they are needed the most, with the last few locations requested by members of the neighborhoods. One recent location at which the sign was placed was on Cypress Hills Street, due to a fatality there, and speeding has gone down in that area, Wachter said. “Once we put the sign up, speed does slow down. It’s people’s natural reaction when they see the flashing on it,” Wachter said. “In the future we will be working on ones that actually record license plates.” When the speed sign is removed from a particular area and enforcement is returned, Wachter noted, the precinct is seeing less speeding and is giving out less tickets in that area. “That’s why we move them around to keep it fresh, but to reduce the speed naturally. The goal is for no one to speed … if we can take a certain area where we get a majority of accidents or speeding and teach the public that you’ve got to slow down, it’s good. It’s a win-win situation at the end for both of us.” The 104th Precinct removed about 20,000 bees from a tree in Ridgewoood on the morning of May 9. Photo via Twitter/@NYPD104Pct Captain Gregory Mackie, former executive officer of the 104th Precinct, receives an award from the 104th Precinct Community Council on Tuesday, May 10. RIDGEWOOD TIMES/Photo by Anthony Giudice CONGRATULATES Font: Engravers Old English Normal the GLENDALE CIVILIAN OBSERVATION PATROL on 40 years of continued service to our community www.104cop.org or Call: 718-497-1500


RT05122016
To see the actual publication please follow the link above