You are reading

108th Precinct to Roll Out Neighborhood Policing Program Next Month, Info Session Planned Oct. 1

Sergeant Hugo Arica (left) NCO Supervisor for the 108th Precinct, with Police Officer Brian Evensen. (Photo: Nathaly Pesantez)

Sept. 24, 2018 By Nathaly Pesantez

The 108th Precinct, covering Long Island City, Sunnyside, and parts of Woodside and Maspeth, will soon be launching a new program that focuses on neighborhood policing, with a community meet-and-greet planned to mark the roll out.

The program, under the NYPD’s Neighborhood Policing Plan, will divide the precinct into four sectors, where the same officers and personnel will work day in and day out to increase police and community connectivity.

The highlight of the program rests in the Neighborhood Coordination Officers, or NCO’s. Two of these officers, who act as liaisons between the police and the community, will be assigned to each sector.

Sergeant Hugo Arica, NCO supervisor for the 108th Precinct, said the NCOs will be the boots on the ground that will be crime-fighting and problem-solving. The goal, he said, is for officers to familiarize themselves not just with persistent and new issues, but with families, businesses, schools, and people who regularly commute through. Regular meetings with the community will be planned every three months within each sector.

“We want officers to be familiar with everyone within their sectors,” Arica said.

108th Precinct sectors, outlined in red, with sector names circled. (NYPD)

The four sectors, fully staffed with radio dispatchers, supervisors and sector officers, along with NCOs, follow what are generally considered to be neighborhood parameters.

Long Island City west of Sunnyside Yard makes up Sector A, while the adjacent Sector B goes east of the yard up until 43rd Street, making up parts of Long Island City, Blissville and Sunnyside.

The remaining two sectors are divided east of 43rd Street across Queens Boulevard, with Sector C serving parts of Woodside and Sunnyside and Sector D, to the south, covering parts of Maspeth and Woodside.

By breaking up the precinct into sectors, the NYPD is hoping to make it easier for police to respond to neighborhood-specific crime and conditions, rather than the prior model that had separate officers responding to separate cases on a precinct-wide basis.

“We’re always going to have the same officers assigned there,” Arica said.

Traffic, for instance, is one of the areas the 108th Precinct receives the most complaints for. Under the NCO program, a possible scenario can play out where an NCO can execute creative and adaptive techniques to address a problem area, like a problematic intersection, by talking to motorists, cyclists, or coordinating with the DOT.

NCOs, moreover, are receiving additional training to be able to respond to calls more thoroughly. The training is partly a refresher for officers, but also provides instruction on how to do preliminary investigative work.

“Some of the training that they’re getting is like what detectives pretty much get,” Arica said.

The training, in turn, makes for a precinct working more collaboratively to solve crime and quality-of-life problems.

Precincts around the city began rolling out the program in 2015, with the 108th Precinct as one of the last to implement it and a start date set for Oct 1.

Residents can figure out what sector they’re in ahead of time and who their NCOs are by using the 108th Precinct’s online map or contacting the precinct.

The precinct has planned an event on the same day of the roll out for the community to learn about the program, meet with NCOs and find out how to best work in partnership with them.

The 108th Precinct Neighborhood Policing meet and greet will take place on Oct. 1 at Sunnyside Community Services, located at 43-31 39th St., at 7 p.m. Walk-ins are welcome, but RSVP is encouraged by the end of this week to:

Detective Marcos Torres
718-784-5420
marcos.Torres@nypd.org

Police Officer Luis Diaz
718-784-5420
luis.Diaz@nypd.org

email the author: news@queenspost.com

8 Comments

Click for Comments 
George Kelly

Thank God the 108 House LISTENED to common sense….Compstat IS not the Answer..Street Patrols will for sure,cut down on Assaults towards Women..

18
Reply
Harry Ballsagna

The 114 switched to this model last year (or earlier this year). Haven’t noticed any difference. They assign one NCO per sector but the beat cops never get out of their cars and actually walk a neighborhood. How you can learn about an area simply by driving around it waiting for a radio call, I have no idea.

12
Reply
Anonymous

Make sure the cops have ID on their patrols. After living in this area for many years, I might be confused who these strange people wearing blue outfits and carrying guns might be.

10
1
Reply
Real NYer

There are people getting stabbed, shot, robbed, and raped within the confines of the 108th precinct. Do you really think they’re going to dedicate resources to poop patrol to appease the yuppies? Get real.

3
14
Reply
MRLIC

I hope they start arresting luxury real estate developers for having the audacity to provide housing.

Except for Trump of course. Even though most of his cabinet have been convicted of federal crimes I’m sure he’s innocent. NO COLLUSION MAGA AGAIN.

7
7
Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

City debunks drone reports over LaGuardia after real emergency unfolds in Queens skies

As drone hysteria swept from New Jersey across the Hudson River to New York City on Thursday night, fueled by online reports of nearly a dozen large drones spotted over Queens, a genuine emergency unfolded in the skies above the borough.

The Port Authority and Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) confirmed that a flight out of LaGuardia Airport earlier in the evening was forced to make an emergency landing at JFK Airport after a bird strike blew out an engine on the aircraft.

Op-ed: A new JFK Airport is a doorway to opportunity for local and diverse businesses

Dec. 12, 2024 By Elena Barcenas and Loycent Gordon

As successful small business owners here in Queens, we join all New Yorkers in looking forward to the transformation of JFK International Airport into the world-class airport our city deserves. But a new JFK will serve as more than a global gateway for travelers—for local and minority-owned businesses like ours, it will be a doorway to life-changing opportunities.