Police out in force for Fourth
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Kenneth Ma
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- With almost the entire police force on duty for the
Fourth of July festivities, city officials don’t expect much trouble in
Surf City.
About 225 of the city’s 230 police officers will work Tuesday to help
monitor unruly behavior and head off disturbances in the city before and
after the 96th annual Huntington Beach Fourth of July Parade, which is
expected to draw more than 300,000 people.
The officers will patrol the parade route, Downtown, the beaches and the
fireworks display at Huntington Beach High School.
In past years, the city has borrowed law enforcement personnel from the
Orange County Sheriff’s Department and the California Highway Patrol to
help to keep the crowds under control. But because the number of
post-parade problems has decreased in recent years, the city is asking
only the highway patrol to help with parade traffic this year.
The number of law enforcement personnel on Fourth of July patrol has
steadily declined since the mid-1990s, when disturbances marred the
holiday on several occasions.
In 1995, the patriotic celebration erupted in violence when rowdy
partygoers torched sofas, set trash cans ablaze, overturned bus benches
and trampled dozens of yards. During the chaos, 21-year-old Christopher
Albert was shot and killed.
In 1996, police arrested more than 300 revelers for a variety of
violations, using loudspeakers to disperse crowds from a Downtown stretch
of Main Street.
“Obviously there was a problem five years ago,” city spokesman Rich
Barnard said. The city and businesses “have worked very hard in the last
five years to make the late-evening hours safer. We wanted to make sure
that when families and people come to our community there is a sense of
safety.”
Increased law enforcement and a zero-tolerance policy on drinking in
public has helped to curb the violence, said Lt. Chuck Thomas, a
spokesman for the Huntington Beach Police Department.
The department has also used such tactics as creating teams made up of
one sergeant and eight officers to patrol problem areas in Downtown, and
working together with residents, merchants and the City Council to come
up with safety measures, Thomas said.A number of streets will be closed
during the parade, touted as the largest Fourth of July parade west of
the Mississippi.
A section of Main Street from Acacia to Clay avenues will be closed to
traffic from 7 a.m. to noon, and a Downtown area bordered by Pacific
Coast Highway, Palm Avenue and 11th and Main streets will also be closed
to traffic from 1 p.m. to after midnight.
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