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Graffiti Busters Fight Vandalism in Jamaica Plain, One of Boston's Most-Tagged Neighborhoods

A team of five men with two trucks responded to about 2,500 tagged sites this year in 23 neighborhoods throughout the city.

 

It won't surprise Jamaica Plain residents to learn that our neighborhood is one of the most-tagged in the city.

Much further down the list is West Roxbury, the home neighborhood of Marc Abelard. Walking through Westie recently, he's noticed more graffiti on storefronts, on the sides of buildings and throughout his neighborhood in general. In the last eight months, he says, tags have gotten bigger and the taggers have grown bolder.

“My fear is if it's not curbed, it’s going to spread to individual homes,” Abelard said.

Too late. It already has.

 

Two Trucks, Five Men

Enter Michael Bartosiak, executive director for the city’s Property Management and Construction department, and the leader of Boston’s Graffiti Busters: a team of five men with two trucks who scrub away the spray paint on commercial and residential buildings in 23 neighborhoods throughout the city.

West Roxbury is on the low end, with only 15 tags between July 2011 and July 2012. Jamaica Plain and Back Bay, on the other hand, are two of the most tagged neighborhoods, with 267 and 266 responses, respectively. The South End falls in the middle with 108; Fenway with 54; the North End with 49; Charlestown with 32 and Beacon Hill with 19.

There's usually an uptick in the summer (apparently taggers don't enjoy standing outside on a 10-degree winter night with a can of spray paint) and in the fall when students return, particularly in the Fenway, Back Bay and Mission Hill neighborhoods.

"We all hope they grow out of that fad, but you have a whole new group the next year," he said.

Back Bay is also an ideal target because it's easy to hide in all the dark alleys or duck behind a car. It often helps when locals step up to the plate – like the Back Bay Graffiti NABBers , who have taken neighborhood graffiti into their own hands and are even trying to get motion-sensor cameras installed on buildings where tagging is known to take place.

Bartosiak, who has been involved since the city program began in 1995, said overall graffiti has decreased as a result of a better response rate and more people reporting incidents.

 

How to report graffiti

You can call the mayor's 24-hour hotline at 617-635-4500 to report tags. The Citizens Connect service, where people can report graffiti directly to the city over their phone, has played a big role in decreasing tags.

“It comes right to my desk,” Bartosiak said. And if it's not something his department handles, he can pass it on to the Parks and Recreation Department if it’s a park bench that’s been vandalized, or the MBTA if it’s a road sign.

The Graffiti Busters deal primarily with tags on residential and commercial buildings, saving local businesses and residents big bucks.

 

'Some people still don't know we exist'

If someone paints a dirty word across your front door, the special removal solution alone costs about $500, and it could run upwards of $1,000 to call someone to take care of it. The city does it for free – and they do it a lot.

Last year they responded to about 2,500 sites with tags that ranged from one square foot, to 50 feet long and 10 feet high, Bartosiak said. They’ll get rid of it within 30 days, but will respond immediately for anything that’s racial or offensive.

“Some people don’t know we exist. I still hear that after 17 years," Bartosiak said. "It’s a free program, and it’s your tax dollars going back to you.”

However, he wants to remind people to be as specific as possible when reporting an incident. It’s not uncommon for the team to receive a wrong address or to go to a site and overlook graffiti that’s small and hard to see. In other words, if something is painted on your 2-by-2 inch windowsill, say so when reporting it. Don’t just mark ‘other’ and hope they find it.

Much of the success has been because of the support from the community.

“They believe in the program, he said, "because when they call it in, we show up and get the job done."

Number of Patch sites the Graffiti Busters have cleaned up, by neighborhood:

2012* 2011*
Jamaica Plain 266 114
Back Bay 267 168
South End 108 49
Fenway 54 106
North End 49 35
Charlestown 32 28
Beacon Hill 19 37
West Roxbury 15 16
*=fiscal years

Top neighborhoods in the city targeted for graffiti

2012 2011
Allston 324 343
Brighton 134 111
Back Bay 267 168
Jamaica Plain 266 114
Dorchester 207 216
Mission Hill 155 101
  • On a scale of 1-5, how bad a problem is graffiti in Jamaica Plain?

    (Voting has been closed for this question)
    • 5 (as bad as I can imagine)
        1 (16%)
    • 4
        1 (16%)
    • 3
        4 (66%)
    • 2
        0 (0%)
    • 1 (as good as can be in a city)
        0 (0%)
    Total votes: 6
  • Your vote will only count once. This is not a scientific poll. View Results Vote!
Related Topics: Graffiti, Graffiti Busters, Services, Tagging, and Taxes

Phil Lindsay

11:14 am on Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Hey Patch! You left out South Boston, Roxbury, East Boston, Charlestown, Dorchester, Mattapan, Hyde Park and Roslindale in your little chart. You also failed to mention if you own and IPhone there is a Boston Citizen Connect application that allows you to report right to City Hall with a photo and your location w/o making a call. Along the vein of the start of my comment, I've found the City takes a lot more aggressive approach to graffitti reports in JP and closer to down town than they do out in the more distant (and poorer) neighborhoods. I still have a few reports open in Dorchester from 6-8 months ago while the ones in JP are closed within days....

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Cate Lecuyer

1:00 pm on Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Hi Phil,

I just added the numbers for the top 5 targeted neighborhoods, which includes Dorchester. I don't have the numbers for all 23 neighborhoods the Graffiti Busters cover, but I can track them down. I believe I did mention the Citizen Connect app - take a peek under 'how to report graffiti' in the story.

I'm sorry to hear that they haven't taken care of the Dorchester incidents. Mike was pretty clear when he said they clean up something within 30 days. Regardless of the reason, I don't think it would hurt to file another report.

Reply

Rich P

4:43 pm on Wednesday, July 18, 2012

They do a great job and FAST !!
8-]

Reply

Phil Lindsay

4:57 pm on Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Cate--Thanks for the update on the neighborhoods. The issue could be juristiction in Dot as I just went back over my posts and the two that are as yet unresolved at post boxes. I kept a square mile around my house clean for almost 20 years. I'm not as avid as before but there are spots I always clean. I have a good joke about Mike Dukakis and I cleaning Post Boxes of paint. He got yelled at in Brookline suggesting they had higher asperations for him. I got yelled at in Dorchester because I was doing a union job...

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