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Mayor Dave Bing, who has devoted most of his attention to a $300 million budget deficit, can't afford to be seen as lax on the issue just before the Nov. 3 election in which he is seeking a full term. He began planning this summer and expects 50,000 volunteers
-- about the same number as in past years -- to help patrol by car and on foot. Curfews for anyone under 18 again will be in place. "Foreclosed and abandoned homes are always a concern for the police and fire departments," Bing said. "This year is no different. While we are in the midst of an economic crisis, there is no excuse to not protect the city from those who want to do it harm." Police patrols have increased in Banks' neighborhood. Known arsonists are being tracked down, said Police Chief Warren Evans, who doesn't believe the rash of fires are precursors "of things to come." "I think we've earned an Angels' Night reputation," he said. "Who knows where these phenomena start, the idea of acting a fool on these nights, anyway?"
The series of arsons frightened Willie Mae Foreman, who woke to find that the house across the street had been torched. Two more vacant homes are next door. Whoever set that house on fire "could have got the one next door and I would have been hit," said Foreman, speaking through protective metal bars on the door of the house she has lived in since 1973. In the past, neighborhood patrols kept arsonists at bay over the Halloween period, she said. But "after this happened the other night, I'm fearful."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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