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- NATION, Page 52May the Force Be with You
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- In crime-weary New York City, it's time to call the cops
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- With each passing day, the grim tally mounted. In Brooklyn
- an 11-year-old girl was wounded in her family's home by a stray
- bullet from the street outside. Two days later an 18-year-old
- Bronx man was stabbed to death by a panhandler who had demanded
- a dollar. Then a Queens man was shot and seriously wounded as
- he chased gunmen who had robbed a neighborhood grocery store.
- A typical week in New York City.
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- But public outrage about the city's record crime spree
- seemed to crystallize last week, and officials scrambled to
- respond with calls for more police. New York's Governor Mario
- Cuomo urged the city to hire 5,000 more officers immediately,
- returning the force close to the peak strength of 32,000 that
- it wielded in the early 1970s. "The time for exquisite analysis
- has passed," said Cuomo. "You have to produce the police."
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- The Governor's announcement was a direct challenge to Mayor
- David Dinkins, who was already dodging complaints that his
- quiet, cautious manner -- deemed an asset during last fall's
- election campaign -- was not well suited to leading the fight
- against crime. With budgetary constraints frustrating his
- efforts to fulfill a campaign promise to expand the force, the
- mayor consistently refused to commit himself to a specific
- number before receiving a manpower report from police
- commissioner Lee Brown on Oct. 1. Cuomo's address, and a growing
- sense of crisis, forced Dinkins at last to announce that an
- additional 3,000 to 6,000 police would be hired. "If the
- broader message has not been clear before," he declared, "I
- state it simply now. Thousands of officers are on their way."
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- The next question was how to pay for them. Though the
- Governor promised to help the city find ways to come up with
- the estimated $340 million it will cost to add 5,000 recruits,
- he offered no money up front. That confronted Dinkins with the
- prospect of proposing more taxes and service cuts just two
- months after winning the city council's approval for a record
- $800 million in new local taxes. As one step, he promised to
- consider a proposal by city council speaker Peter Vallone for
- a 25 cents surcharge on lottery tickets.
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- The mayor also took issue with last week's TIME cover story
- on the city's woes. He complained that the TIME/CNN poll
- accompanying the piece had focused on questions in which New
- Yorkers bewailed the city's decline but had left out the fact
- that 70% of residents said they still think it is the greatest
- city in the world. "There was no selective release," responded
- Hal Quinley, senior vice president of Yankelovich Clancy
- Shulman, which conducted the survey. "The poll results were
- overwhelmingly negative."
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