Study: More Green Space, Less Crime

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9/26/22, 2:59 PM

Study: More Green Space, Less Crime - INDY Week

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Study: More Green Space, Less Crime A new study finds urban green spaces in cities like Durham and Raleigh linked to a lower risk of crime. BY THOMASI MCDONALD

SEP. 21, 2022 6:00 A.M.

Hillside Park in Durham | Photo by Brett Villena

On a sunny midafternoon this week, Hillside Park’s heavy tree canopy offered a welcome respite from the day’s rising temperatures. Largely owing to gentrification and a housing inventory shortage, the traditionally Black community is becoming increasingly diversified. An older white woman walked her two small dogs around a sidewalk that encircles the park’s baseball field. Meanwhile, a shirtless Black man napping in the outfield let loose with a loud yawn. Three Black teens puffed on a blunt underneath the park’s picnic shelter. It’s all good in the neighborhood at the moment, but Hillside Park, which sits in the southern shadow of Durham’s downtown district, has been the scene of at least two violent fatal crimes in recent years. In late May 2019, police charged 18-year-old Antonio Stanback with murder following the shooting death of Darren Dixon, a 22-year-old man who was found dead in the gazebo at the park in the 1300 block of South Roxboro Street. The year before, police charged Michael Anthony Person, 55, with the stabbing death of Alicia Elder, 50, at the park. Elder and Dixon were the sole victims of fatal violent crimes at the park since 2010. That’s two fatalities too many, but it’s also revealing.

https://indyweek.com/news/durham/study-more-green-space-less-crime/

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