Awards
2006 Graffiti Hurts® Award Winners Prove the Value of Partnerships
Cities taking top honors in the 2006 Graffiti Hurts® National Award competition are successfully bringing together community partners and engaging citizen volunteers in the fight against graffiti. Winning cities this year:
- Keep Dallas Beautiful, Dallas, TX (Communities greater than 300,000 population)
- Together Against Graffiti, El Mirage, AZ (Communities less than 300,000 population)
- Celebrate the Arts, Wilmington, NC (Paint brush mural)
Winning programs received a cash award of up to $1,000, a plaque, and graffiti prevention prizes. Winners in the community "under 300,000" and "over 300,000" populations each received a FlashCAM-880 Wireless graffiti deterrent system manufactured by Q-Star Technology (www.qstartech.com) and valued at nearly $6,000. The winner in the "paint brush mural" category received a Graffiti Removal Starter Pack from Urban Restoration Group (www.graffitiremovers.biz) valued at $400.
Keep Dallas Beautiful, Dallas, TX
From 2004 to 2005, Dallas received over 1,700 graffiti complaints and spent more than $220,000 to clean up defaced property. And yet the City had no comprehensive graffiti prevention program in place. A handful of residents, city employees, and an elected official got the ball rolling. From there, a coalition of neighborhood groups, city services, and Keep Dallas Beautiful was organized.
The coalition set out to achieve three goals: create a new city program targeting graffiti vandalism, seek $250,000 in funding to operate the program, and organize a citywide paint out called Graffiti Wipe Out 2006. They also designated a single contact in the city for graffiti, wrote a new anti-graffiti ordinance, and established a database to track vandalized sites and volunteers. Finally, better coordination between prosecutors, the district attorney's office, and the City of Dallas was established.
The Graffiti Wipe Outs drew 1,500 volunteers to clean up over 200 graffiti sites and cover over 50,000 square feet of graffiti. These events were featured on the Dallas Morning news, ABC, NBC, Fox, and Telemundo. Graffiti education also made its way into nine schools. And today, the City Council is considering a $175,000 budget to operate the new program, graffiti has been reduced, and volunteers are continuing to wipe out graffiti.
Contact: Larry Lankford - 972 852-2789 - larry@ecophones.com
Cecile Carson - 940-230-6035 - keepdallasbeautiful@yahoo.com
Together Against Graffiti, El Mirage, AZ
Together Against Graffiti began with one woman's effort to combat graffiti that had overrun her city, and has now grown to include nearly every city in Maricopa County, AZ. In the year since Together Against Graffiti has been in operation there has been a 97% reduction in graffiti and 40 graffiti arrests
The first step was organizing a team. Representatives from the police department, code enforcement, city courts, public works, and public officials joined forces with citizens, home owners associations, parents, students, schools, and the media. At the center of it all was Together Against Graffiti
The team focused on an eight-step program, which included arrest and prosecution of graffiti vandals, rapid removal, citizen and school graffiti education, involving home owners associations, and organizing volunteers to adopt-a-spot. "We are winning," says Linda Kleiner, founder of Together Against Graffiti. "Fighting graffiti just takes a team effort."
Contact: Linda Kleiner - 623-933-9391 - desert25841@cox.net
Celebrate the Arts, Wilmington, NC
A public wary of using parking decks littered with graffiti was the impetus for a mural project spearheaded by the City of Wilmington and Celebrate the Arts. The result is no new graffiti on the mural walls and occupancy of the parking deck has increased by 10% and growing.
The mural, made from a mixed medium of paint, crushed tile mosaic, and clay tiles, is called "Layers of Wilmington," with each deck representing a different layer of Wilmington and what makes it a special place to live. With a budget of just $1,500, the parking deck mural project has received donations for paint and other supplies from businesses and residents.
To date, over 2,000 school children have created tiles and received education on graffiti vandalism and community pride. Community members have also gotten involved painting and creating their own tiles.
Contact: Julie Cook - 910-262-7216 - designjc@ec.rr.com
Award winners were selected by an independent panel of judges, which included Rosemary DeMenno, the National Crime Prevention Council; Faith Wiedler, National Council to Prevent Delinquency; Sgt. Dwight Waldo, San Bernardino Police Department; Nancy Melendez, Keep Riverside Clean and Beautiful, CA; and Michelle Neuhauser, The Sherwin-Williams Company.
