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National Evaluation of Weed and Seed: Salt Lake City Case Study

NCJ Number
175700
Date Published
June 1999
Length
57 pages
Publication Series
Annotation

This case study documents the activities implemented under the Weed and Seed program in Salt Lake City, Utah, one of eight sites for the National Evaluation of Weed and Seed, and assesses the program's impact at this site.

Abstract

Unveiled in 1991, Operation Weed and Seed is an attempt to improve the quality of life in America's cities. The ultimate goals of Weed and Seed are to control violent crime, drug trafficking, and drug-related crime in targeted high-crime neighborhoods and to provide a safe environment free of crime and drug use. The program is grounded in the philosophy that targeted areas can best be improved by a two-pronged strategy of "weeding" out violent offenders, drug traffickers, and other criminals by removing them from the targeted area and "seeding" the area with human services and neighborhood revitalization efforts. Community policing is intended to be the "bridge" between "weeding" and "seeding." The evaluation activities undertaken for this case study included onsite observation of program activities; in-person interviews with program staff, key law enforcement personnel, community leaders, service providers, and participants; review of program documents; a survey of target area residents; and analysis of computerized crime and arrest records provided by the local police department. The evaluation findings show that for the 5-month period before the start of Weed and Seed (March through July 1995), the number of crimes per month in the target area averaged 11. In a similar period after the program's implementation (March through July 1997), the number of Part 1 crimes per month averaged 12.5 in the target area, an increase of approximately 23 percent. Findings presented from the community survey focus on perceptions of the neighborhood, victimization, police response, community involvement, perceptions of social services and other programs, and perceptions of the Weed and Seed program. Future directions and degree of institutionalization are also discussed. 12 exhibits

Date Published: June 1, 1999