Monday, July 18, 2022

PREVENTING CRIME – Walk Your Dog

Crime Prevention Officers frequently encourage people to walk around in their neighborhoods. The idea is to have eyes and ears out in the neighborhood to detect crime or suspicious activity.

Some citizens take this seriously, “patrolling” regularly, maybe even setting up a patrol schedule with some neighbors. While neighbors might start out with a good faith effort, patrols can fall off after things die down and there is nothing more to report.

A better strategy is to go for a walk, not just to patrol, but to get some exercise. This is an activity that anyone in the neighborhood can participate in when they want, in the morning, afternoon, or evening. Go for the exercise. But be aware of your surroundings. If you see any suspicious activity or a crime in progress call 911 on your cell phone.

And walking your dog helps lower crime in neighborhoods according to one study. A study out of Ohio State University showed that neighborhoods with more dogs had lower rates of homicide, robbery and, aggravated assaults compared to neighborhoods with fewer dogs. So, walking your dog can help make a safe neighborhood.

The study also ties neighbors who trust each other to lower crime rates. With dog walking and high trust comes lower crime.

This makes sense. If people are out walking, with or without their dogs, there is more opportunity to say hi and from time to time to chat on the sidewalk. Dogs often create attention and opportunities to chat and for neighbors to get to know one another. Building trust.

With high trust comes a higher likelihood that neighbors will help each other when a threat is present.

The study also found that with more dogs, fewer property crimes, such as burglaries, occurred in the neighborhood. The physical presence of dogs and the attention that barking provides act as a deterrent to the property crimes.

The lesson is to get some exercise. Get to know your neighbors. Give your dog some exercise. While you are out be aware of your surroundings. Don’t keep your eyes buried on the screen of your cell phone. Enjoy your neighborhood while you keep it safe.

 

 

 

Phys.org:

https://phys.org/news/2022-07-dogs-neighborhood-crime.html

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