H.O.N.G.K.O.N.G.

West View Cemetery Beautification

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The West View cemetery needs shade trees. The sun and the winds are harsh . Those of us who have loved ones buried in West View can work together to make it a more pleasant  place to visit.

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_______ --------------West View Cemetery-------------
The funeral processional path taken from Broad St to the West View cemetery gate is a short two block drive.

Ten years ago I thought very differently about my life. Both of my aging parents were becoming increasingly feeble.  Back then, my goal was to convince them to get out of Harrisburg and to move to Western North Carolina.
 I thought that West View cemetery was tacky and  I taunted  them  that if they were buried there  that  I would dig them up and  move them to  a cemetery near my summer home near Highlands N. C. Luckily,  I was the only child born to the most wonderful parents in the world and  we many times discussed matters of "death or sex". 
My relationship with them benefited me in matters of life and society because of their wisdom. Mama was ten and daddy was five at the start of the Great Depression. Mama was born and lived her entire  life between Frog Holler and Harrisburg. Ten years ago I was enjoying daddy's' money while daddy worked on his rental property on Tuttle St. He took good care of my mama. One day after hang gliding off Whiteside Mountain with the Peregrine Falcons, I got a call from mama. She was in a panic. Something was wrong with daddy. My return to Augusta would last me until this day.
 I nursed the both of them. Daddy died in August of 2003 after a defect in his Lincoln Town car which,  was parked next to our family home place. They both  burned.  The fire was June 6 2003.

The next four years I spent restoring mamas' home. We lived next door in another of my parents houses. Mama moved into our renovated family place in 2006. She was in the end stages of congestive heart failure. She died eight months later, June 8, 2003.
There is something about laboring with ones hands that is good for the body and soul. My work on our burned home inspired me to stay in Harrisburg. Maturity finally kicked in and I like many people in their forties have learned that you cannot run from problems and through my mothers wisdom I have come to the conclusion that life is what we make it. Neighborhood are what we make them.

The appearance of West View avenue is indeed what we make it.
How many people with the power to beautify the path to West View cemetery are reading this article ? If you would like to form a committee to plant beautiful trees and shrubbery alone the sides of West View avenue leading to the gates of the cemetery please join H.O.N.G.K.O.N.G.

If you are a funeral director I hope that you will be getting a call from a H.O.N.G.K.O.N.G members. Like the preachers say...dig deep ! West View Avenue has been long neglected. It is time to get our hands dirty
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http://www.latimes.com/ 

Drugs: The 'root cause' of homelessness?

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The City Attorney's office defends drug sweeps down on skid row.
November 5, 2007

Policing skid row remains one of the most controversial topics in Los Angeles, with the White House's homeless czar joining with the American Civil Liberties Union in arguing that L.A. can't arrest its way out of the homelessness problem, while beleaguered law enforcement looks for ever-more creative measures to bar former criminals from even showing up in the area.

To argue the enforcement side of the coin, several members of the City Attorney's office, Chief Deputy City Attorney Rich Llewellyn and Deputy City Attorney Jose Egurbide, came by the editorial board last week to discuss the lawlessness that had been going hand-in-hand with homelessness until they started cracking down last year. Some highlights:

Rich Llewellyn: We just wanted to sort of give you a sense of what we've been doing on skid row, and kind of where we see that going, and hopefully to keep y'all engaged because we think this is an opportunity for our local institutions to kind of stay engaged, because we think there are certain opportunities the next few years there. [...]

Just [to] let you know what the City Attorney's office is doing on skid row, because, um, I think what has gotten most of the coverage, almost exclusive coverage in the press, has been the plight of the homeless in the skid row area in central City. And we just want to let you know that the Safer Cities Initiative is a much broader and more comprehensive initiative that addressed -- that really was intended to, and continues to look at -- the entire community, and the situation of the skid row community, and all the different elements of the population there and all the different problems. [...]

We just think it's important to understand the full extent of the problems that existed there, because I think a lot of that has been sort of under the radar by everybody, and we being down there on the streets, have really gotten a feel for it. [...] We put together a team of I think terrific prosecutors working very closely with LAPD and a whole variety of partners that really span the spectrum, from LAPD and the sheriff's and district attorney's office, to public counsel, ACLU, even LACAN -- I think we're about the only ones on the city side that work with them in connection with the so-called 28-day shuffle.

So let me give you a few items that we brought down that you might find interesting. First is, I don't know if you guys have seen this -- I actually spotted it just the night before last -- looks like 18 th Street, which you guys are well aware of, major gang, tagged St. Vibiana's, so here's some photos that we took. I think that's just indicative of the fact that there are some serious criminal problems that remain in that area. [...]

And the last thing is, because there's one issue that's sort of come up quite a bit, with Professor Blasi's report and some of the editorials, is the buy-bust efforts of LAPD, their narcotics unit. This is a nuisance abatement action that we filed -- we call it a narco abatement action -- against two locations on skid row, filed probably about a year ago or so. But the only good thing -- the thing I think is most useful about it is, it sort of goes through and shows how these buy-bust operations work, and so there's just no misunderstanding that the way they target location--

Tim Cavanaugh: Sorry, let me just get the phrasing: buy-bust?

Llewellyn: Buy-bust, which is essentially a undercover officer negotiating a purchase of a controlled substance down on skid row. It's usually going to be crack, or crack cocaine, or heroin. And just how it works: they're not free-roaming sort of just going around the street trying to pick off people. They target locations, particular locations -- it could be a street corner. Now, as we see the change in the way the drug dealers are operating, it's now more indoors, so it could be in this case a restaurant or a bar, it could be a liquor store. But they target these locations, oftentimes with videotape cameras set up [...] in order to record the transactions, and then they make the busts as part of a comprehensive effort to try to eradicate the drug-dealing problem at that particular location.

And it is a problem in terms of the fact that a lot of drug dealers, probably the vast majority down on skid row, are going to be addicts, and oftentimes homeless. So they will get arrested as part of these operations, but that is because they actually are, they are actually selling, it's not -- and we have some statistics at the end of the summary we gave you [...] as to the actual, the number of arrests, felony arrests for actual sales, and you'll see most of the narcotics arrests are for actual sales, not possession with intent to sell, and not necessarily with a just a simple possession.

Cavanaugh: So, can an officer initiate the purchase?

Llewellyn: It can be in all different ways, it can ... it could be an officer approaching somebody, it could be an officer just sort of planting himself and waiting to be approached, it could be an officer approaching an intermediary who's then, who then passes him on to a seller, or as you'll see in a lot of these instances he'll approach somebody, they'll go into the bar or the restaurant, purchase the narcotic, and then come out with the narcotics; it's oftentimes wrapped in plastic, they keep it in their mouth in order to conceal it until the actual purchase. Cash changes hands and then they spit it out and hand it over to the narcotics officer. So that's, you know, the typical scenario down there, and as you can see there's a tremendous number of arrests, almost 10,000 down there, most narcotics-related, and that's because as we discovered, as did LAPD, that the narcotics problem was so entrenched and was so serious down there, and that really created or turned out to be the root cause of a lot of the other problems.

Jim Newton: Can I just ask you here, just looking at these numbers, close to 10,000 total arrests, but I only see 2,800 narcotics arrests under felonies for drugs, and 833 for misdemeanors for drugs, so I only see 3,600 out of 9,900 narcotics arrests. Am I reading this incorrectly?

Jose Egurbide: That's right.

Newton: Oh; so the tremendous majority are not narcotics then? The tremendous majority--

Egurbide: About 44% of the felonies, are, of the felony arrests are--

Llewellyn: Narcotics-related.

Egurbide: Narcotics-related.

Newton: And about--

Egurbide: About a half.

____________________________________________________________
scenarios Joseph E Smiths' dilemma.

Joseph E Smith who is a major downtown Augusta property owner, owns mostly commercial properties. Mr Smiths'  efforts to change the zoning of his property located at 602 Crawford ave is responsible for setting a precedence in Harrisburg which has the potential effect of increasing population density.

The ordinance was an historical change which allowed multiple family dwellings in the Harrisburg neighborhood.

 In one hypothetical  scenario it would be to Mr. Smiths best interest to see residential property values in our neighborhood to plummet so that he can step in and buy them cheaply in speculation that the blighted  area will turn commercial.
 In another  hypothetical scenario Mr. Smith would want his residential holdings in the Harrisburg neighborhood  to appreciate as a residental setting.
Using eather scenario  Mr. Smith is faced with  dilemma.

He owns the building which houses Mercy Ministry.
 
The Mercy Menistries web site said that Mercy Ministry has the option to buy the building.                 

The dilemma is that Mercy Ministry is bad for residential property values in our residentail neighborhood. Joe must weigh the decision of weather the profit from the building which houses Mercy Ministry is more valuable to him than the depreciation that Mercy Ministry will have on his residential property which is close by Mercy Ministry.

 In an another hypothetical  scenario Joe is so busy he does not notice how trashed our neighborhood has been the last year or so, because his vested interest is from the prespective of an absentee landlord but, we are sure that if the residents of Country Club Hills had able bodied men from Mercy Ministry defecating in their front yards that Mercy Ministrys would be promptly moved.




 

Waiting for more news.

Trees get old and die and if we are not vigilant and replace them we loose the value of mature trees.

A canopy of street shade  trees shielding the asphalt from the sun would make the Summer more much more pleasant on any street in Augusta.

The best time to plant a tree is twenty years ago. The next best time to plant a tree is today.

One sweltering, hellish Summer day everyone in Augusta might be looking for a shade tree. Power outages can occur.Cool

H.O.N.G.K.O.N.G. stands for Harrisburg Orgnization Networking for Gentrification to Keep Our Neighborhood from becoming a Ghetto

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