Lockport Union-Sun & Journal Online

Local News

October 31, 2009

ELECTION 2009: Inner city: 2nd Ward battleground

Second Ward Alderman Amanda Alexander is running for re-election on the premise of keeping up the progress.

Her opponent, Jack Smith, wonders: What progress?

The 2nd Ward is the city’s smallest ward, geographically, and probably its most diverse. Within the boundaries it contains the central business district, most of the heritage/canal district, a lovely residential neighborhood south of High Street — and north of High, a large patch of blighted inner city.

Smith grants the city made some progress combating blight the past few years, mainly by doubling the building inspection staff to pursue code violations, but he sees a lot being ignored. The enforcers seem satisfied to skirmish in lieu of launching a full-scale enemy offensive, he charges.

Alexander, who took office in January 2008, claims housing stock improvements are a solid accomplishment of the current Council.

“Believe it or not, we’ve gotten a lot of work done on the neighborhoods. Maybe not as fast as some people would like to see ... but if you walk through any neighborhood in the 2nd Ward you’ll see a new roof being put on, places being cleaned up,” she said. “I stay in touch with building inspectors, with the police department, with all of the departments (involved in fighting blight). For a machine to work, it has to be well-oiled; we all work together.”

Smith, a co-founder and current president of an active block club in the Waterman-Genesee streets area, claims the fight seems more like a tussle.

Building inspectors and attorneys put on a show of going after all kinds of properties with code issues, he said, but they often won’t prosecute the most egregious violations because that takes time, money and creativity.

“A lot of homeowners, single or multi-family, well, I don’t want to say they’re being attacked, but I think they are being maybe unfairly cited. And I think the reason for that is the city can’t do anything with the out-of-town landlords that let their property go,” Smith said. “They claim they have no ‘teeth’ to do anything; they won’t try. So, unfortunately, I think they go after the easier stuff. ... What we need is a city attorney, or an outside attorney, who’s actually got a set and is willing to try a case.”

Alexander agreed absentee landlords contribute heavily to housing deterioration, but she accepts the word of building inspectors, attorneys and police who say non-local violators are too hard to catch. “We would have to subpoena, the cost would be huge,” she said. “We do have a lot more people registered (on the city-mandated rental property registry) now.”

Smith is running for alderman because he’s displeased with Alexander’s performance. He considered running 2 years ago, when Phyllis Green still had the job, but when Alexander announced her candidacy, he said, “I thought, good, somebody new. I’ll sit back, watch and see how it goes. And I’m still not happy with my representation.”

The Waterman-Genesee streets-based United Neighborhood Watch Group has received very little support from or Alexander or the city, Smith charged, although it’s the only block club in the 2nd Ward and one of only a few citywide.

Officials say one of the city-paid Community Policing Aide’s duties is to be a liaison to/facilitator of blocks clubs, but UNWG has found “you’re better off on your own,” Smith said.

As for Alexander’s interest in the group, it appears cursory, he added. A professional landscape designer, she was invited to design the club’s proposed community garden on vacant city property and, after being asked for a design several times over a period of months, bowed out.

“The only time she’s been down there is when there’s some press event going on,” Smith said.

Alexander vehemently denied “dumping” the block club when it needed her. She had agreed to supply some landscape designs, she said, but didn’t get to work on them right away because, at the time, the club had not yet obtained the city’s permission to use the vacant lot. A few months later the club held a groundbreaking ceremony that she couldn’t attend due to an obligation out of town, she said; and the day after the ceremony she learned from reading the newspaper that the club intended to get design proposals from both her and a club member’s niece, and pick the one they liked best.

“As a professional, I took that as an insult,” Alexander said, “but I also didn’t want to be chosen over (the member’s) niece. ... If I was competing with another professional designer that would be fine, but it felt awkward” going up against an amateur.

Alexander’s Republican nominating petitions had no signatures from the 3rd district, which includes Genesee Street, Smith observed. Residents have told him that when they’ve asked her to visit, “she won’t come down to the Genesee Street area,” he claimed. “If she doesn’t feel safe there, obviously there’s a real need for a leader who’s going to help make it a better, safer neighborhood.”

Alexander denied avoiding the area, which is hard-hit with blight and petty crime.

“When I go out to get (petition) signatures, I try to do it in the most efficient way possible. I don’t necessarily spread out over the whole city,” she said. “I had enough signatures at the time, so I handed them in.”

Turning to Smith, as they parried in their joint interview with the US&J; editorial board earlier this week, she added emphatically, “I have been on your street, in fact right next door to you, during my campaign, so it’s not like I’m ignoring your area. I’m certainly not afraid to walk in your area. ... If somebody invited me to come speak with them, I would be more than happy to go there.”

Alexander said if she wins re-election, she intends to launch a self-styled meet-the-residents campaign. She abandoned the traditional ward meeting after finding that “in this type of meeting, certain people are very vocal and want their needs met, and it’s not as productive as I’d like. I’d like to start meeting with one person on each block maybe once a week, not necessarily for all their gripes, but to see how their life is like in general, how the neighborhood is, to get a feel for what’s needed, what’s happening, if it’s working and what the city could do to help improve it.”

Another of Alexander’s goals would be to arrange “general education” for residents on block club, she said. Perhaps Smith’s club could assist, she suggested.

Asked by the editorial board whether she’s aware the group already does educational outreach, she responded, “I really don’t know.”

Smith had an awkward moment in the interview as well. In the course of discussing his views about police department preparedness to combat crime, he suggested the increased number of women officers on the force makes it less “intimidating” to drug dealers and criminals.

“We have a lot of gazelles in the department now and not enough pit bulls,” he said. “The recruits are getting smaller these days. They’re probably fast on their feet, they passed all their hand-to-hand combat or whatever they had to take, but I don’t think they’re so intimidating, and I think in our climate in the city right now ... .”

Pressed by the board to explain whether he thinks women officers are not able to fight crime, Smith said, “I’m not saying have fewer women cops ... but you do need some intimidating people on the force.”

“I hear this from a lot of women, it’s not just me,” he added. “They say there’s not a female who’s going to intimidate. ... Face it, females are physically not as strong as most males.”

Alexander disagreed.

“I think a woman with a handgun can be pretty intimidating,” she said. “The officers we do have, they’re probably being scrutinized even more. And for them to be hired by the city, they have to be pretty exemplary to begin with.”

Text Only
Local News
  • 120208 hoyt 5.jpg Reform agenda touted

    Empire State Development Corporation executive Sam Hoyt visited Lockport on Wednesday to tout Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s state budget and government reform plans.
    Changing the way the state does business will bring fiscal relief to counties, cities and towns, eventually, Hoyt suggested.
    It’s too bad the reforms won’t kick in before municipalities like the City of Lockport begin confronting fiscal crises, Mayor Michael Tucker said in response.

    February 9, 2012 2 Photos

  • Going strong Tucker: 'Best days lie ahead'

    The City of Lockport government is smaller than it was 18 months ago but is in a stronger financial place, Mayor Michael W. Tucker said in his annual State of the City address.

    February 8, 2012 1 Photo

  • Trio of new classes proposed for Newfane

    Newfane High School could have three new business courses in the fall, one of which would center on video game design.

    February 8, 2012

  • 120201 city council speaker time limits 5.jpg Municipalities take wait-and-see approach on SPCA funding

    The City and Town of Lockport are each withholding payments to the Niagara SPCA, while other Eastern Niagara County towns are taking a wait-and-see approach.

    February 7, 2012 1 Photo 2 Stories

  • 111205 rocky3.jpg Rocky II

    Friends of Deputy Craig Beiter of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Department plan a benefit on Feb. 26 to raise money to buy and train a new dog for the K-9 Unit.
    Beiter’s German shepherd, Deputy Rocky, was killed while on duty in December, and the sheriff’s department is close to getting a replacement.

    February 6, 2012 1 Photo 2 Stories

  • Basket Factory closes

    The Basket Factory has gone out of business.
    The owners, Julie Thompson Riegle and Dawn Thompson, made the difficult decision last Monday and put the sign on the door Tuesday.

    February 6, 2012

  • No snow is no problem

    Unseasonably warm weather didn’t keep Roy-Hart Winterfest from being a fun day for the families who came out to Roy-Hart Elementary School  on Saturday.
    More than 500 people attended the third annual festivities, which Gasport Lions Club officials said was a big increase from last year. The halls of Roy-Hart Elementary were filled with vendors, programs and movement as excited children rushed from one activity to another.

    February 6, 2012

  • 120203 tech park.jpg Shovel-ready park has perks

    At first glance, the big, orange road sign announcing vacant property on Lockport Road as a “shovel ready certified” building site seems a bit gratuitous.
    To companies looking for new places to launch a business, it’s not. The sign in their eyes is a welcome mat, for in three words a community pronounced itself ready, willing and able to make a deal quickly.

    February 3, 2012 1 Photo

  • Roy-Hart to play the big stage

    A group of local students will be performing this month at Kleinhans Music Hall just before a BPO concert.
    The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra will welcome the Royalton-Hartland High School Mixed Chorus as part of the BPO’s Community Spotlight program on Feb. 19 at Kleinhans in Buffalo. The chorus will perform under the direction of Carolyn Unitas Roos and accompanied by Janice McKinney.

    February 3, 2012

  • Former NFTA cop sentenced

    A former Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority police officer will spend six years on probation for sending a sexually explicit photo to a teenage girl, a girl he later had a sexual encounter with.
    In addition, John W. Ingham will spend 25 weekends in the service of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office Work Program. Ingham was sentenced Thursday by State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch, Sr. Ingham will also register as a sex offender.

    February 3, 2012

Featured Ads
Front page
AP Video
Man Killed in Courthouse Shootout Video of Ga. Man Who Killed Girl Released Air Force Airlines: Leaders Get Polished Service Ga Girl Fights Off Kidnapper at Walmart Nevada Highway Patrol, City Settle Beating Case White House Attacks Romney on Birth Control Homs Bombardment Continues, Global Outcry Grows Mo. Teen Gets Life Sentence for Killing Girl, 9 Lower-hassle Screening to Be Tested at Airports Raw Video: Dog Rescued From Icy Colo. Water Helmet Camera Captures Calif. Fire Rescue Worker Tells 911: Powell 'exploded the House' Triple Win: Santorum Takes Minn., Mo., Colo. Injured Marine Inspired by Homecoming No Rape Charges Against Son of NYPD Commissioner Egypt's Ruling Generals Play Risky Game With US Former Komen Exec Defends Funding Cut Skip the Coffee Cup and Inhale Your Caffeine Fix Calif. Gay Marriage Ban Ruled Unconstitutional Jury Selection for Ex-UVa Athlete Enters 2nd Day
Seasonal Content
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
AP Video
Man Killed in Courthouse Shootout Video of Ga. Man Who Killed Girl Released Air Force Airlines: Leaders Get Polished Service Ga Girl Fights Off Kidnapper at Walmart Nevada Highway Patrol, City Settle Beating Case White House Attacks Romney on Birth Control Homs Bombardment Continues, Global Outcry Grows Mo. Teen Gets Life Sentence for Killing Girl, 9 Lower-hassle Screening to Be Tested at Airports Raw Video: Dog Rescued From Icy Colo. Water Helmet Camera Captures Calif. Fire Rescue Worker Tells 911: Powell 'exploded the House' Triple Win: Santorum Takes Minn., Mo., Colo. Injured Marine Inspired by Homecoming No Rape Charges Against Son of NYPD Commissioner Egypt's Ruling Generals Play Risky Game With US Former Komen Exec Defends Funding Cut Skip the Coffee Cup and Inhale Your Caffeine Fix Calif. Gay Marriage Ban Ruled Unconstitutional Jury Selection for Ex-UVa Athlete Enters 2nd Day
Twitter Updates
Follow me on Twitter
Seasonal Content
Helium debate
Helium
Section Teases
Royal Wedding Live