Posted on Fri, Oct. 30, 2009
Crime Watch appoints new board members
BY CARMEN GONZALEZ CALDWELL
Special to The Miami Herald
Citizens’ Crime Watch recently held its 35th Annual Board meeting and the election of its officers.
The 2009-10 board members are Irving Heller, president; Robert Parker, vice president; Sam Harte, treasurer; Anna Carazo-Hohanning, secretary.
The members at large are: James Dibernardo, Richard Masten, Roger Fritze, Miami-Dade Commissioner Joe Martinez, Tammie Clearfield, Annie Ross, Richard Strachan, Terri Guttman Valdez, Nancy Burdelsky, Charles Hurley, Oscar Vigoa, Frank Fernandez, Priscilla M. Rivera, David Ward, Naim Erched, Craig M. Dorne, Sofian A. Zakkout, Meg Garza and Guillermo Diaz Rousselot.
This was a trying year because of budgets, and this coming year will be worse. We have officially been advised that we will loose $22,925 — about 30 percent — from our budget. But to make it worse, now that Miami-Dade county commissioners lost their discretionary funds, they will not be able to supplement the $37,500 cut two years ago from our original budget. So we are losing a total of $60,425.
This will be a major impact for program materials, crime watch signs, stickers and T-shirts. We will be able to continue to host crime watch meetings but will be extremely limited in providing the crime prevention materials.
But not all is bad news, because school board members and Superintendent Alberto Carvalho have reinstated our Youth Crime Watch funding for this school year.
Now here are just a few things we accomplished this past year with a budget of $326,500 that we won’t have this year.
Neighborhood Watch Program:
• Established more than 715 new Neighborhood Watch groups countywide as well as revitalizing 325 old groups. These new groups, revitalized groups and many Safety events brought a total of reaching 56,000 residents, and distributed more than 135,000 pieces of crime prevention literature.
• Responded to more than 1,700 inquires through our newly designed website www.citizenscrimewatch.com from around the country, South America, England, Germany, Netherlands, Canada, Philippines, France, Colombia, Argentina.
Visitors to our website averaged 2,000 a month.
• Coordinated Senior Crime Prevention programs reaching over 845 seniors.
Youth Crime Watch of Miami-Dade Program:
Although the funding for this program was limited, our coordinators conducted 36 Club meetings, 443 crime prevention presentations and served more than 37,000 students. Our coordinators distributed 38,000 pieces of crime prevention literature to the students, parents, teachers and school police officers.
Our McGruff program participated in classroom presentations, school assemblies in topics such as anti-bullying prevention, sexting, Internet safety, drug awareness and reporting crimes in their school.
Until next week, be safe and be involved in your community, because you do make a difference.
Carmen Caldwell is executive director of the Citizens’ Crime Watch of Miami-Dade. Send feedback and news for this column to her at carmen@citizenscrimewatch.com, or call her, 305-470-1670.
Archive for October, 2009
Lexington, KY (10/29/09) – It is with deep sadness and concern that we announce the shooting death of Imam Luqman A. Abdullah, of Masjid Al-Haqq (Detroit, MI). Imam Luqman was a representative of the Detroit Muslim community to the “National Ummah” and the general assembly (Shura) of the Muslim Alliance in North America (MANA).
By Hani Salah, IOL Correspondent
KIEV – Forty-five weekly schools that teach the Arabic language are gaining popularity among Ukrainian intellectuals and are helping introducing them to Islam and its civilization.
October 27, 2009
How often do you get the chance to hear from Capitol Hill insiders, Hollywood executives, and national news reporters on the most pressing issues facing our community and our country? Join MPAC on Saturday, December 5th as we convene a series of thought-provoking conversations around the theme of “With Change Come Challenges.”
Continue reading ‘Six Weeks Left Until MPAC’s 9th Annual Convention’
Amnesty said between 180,000 and 200,000 Palestinians in West Bank rural communities have no access to running water, while taps in other areas often run dry.
“Israel allows the Palestinians access to only a fraction of the shared water resources, which lie mostly in the occupied West Bank”, Donatella Rovera, an Amnesty researcher, said.
By Hany Salah, IOL Correspondent
VALENCIA – Spanish Muslims launched Saturday, October 26, an independent, self-regulatory body to train imams in the southern European country.
Jordanian security authorities are investigating an attack on Leith al-Shbeilat, a veteran opposition politician, by unknown assailants.“The initial investigations indicate that the incident has no background and that it happened after al-Shbeilat had an intense argument with a group of people,” Major Mohammad Khatib, a public security department spokesman, said on Monday.
ANI Saturday 24th October, 2009
London, Oct. 24 : Lancashire’s Burnley College has banned a Muslim woman from becoming one of its students after she refused to remove her veil.
Continue reading ‘UK College bans Muslim woman for refusing to remove veil’
Muhammad Humaidan | Arab News
JEDDAH: About 80 percent of doctors and medical practitioners who took part in a recent survey said they would not take the anti-swine flu vaccine and would not give it to their children.
Continue reading ‘Poll: Doctors will not give H1N1 shots to their kids’
LONDON | The controversial debut of Britain’s far-right leader on a flagship television debate show has been a ratings bonanza for the British Broadcasting Corp., but it is not clear whether British National Party chief Nick Griffin gained from all the attention.
Continue reading ‘Far-right leader’s BBC debut boosts ratings, fuels outrage’
Heaping the blame on both the Israelis and Palestinians for the Middle East deadlock, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has presented a downbeat report on the Obama administration’s so-far frustrated efforts to kickstart the regional peacemaking, reported The New York Times on Friday, October 23.
Morello said that he was ‘sickened’ at the thought of his music being use during interrogations [EPA]































