Polo is becoming proactive: Crime prevention, electronic alert
 programs launched

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Polo Police Chief Dennis Christen holds up the symbol of the Helping Hand program Tuesday night at a community crime prevention meeting at the Polo Senior Center. The signs are posted in the front windows of participating homes and businesses.
Polo Police Chief Dennis Christen holds up the symbol of the Helping Hand program Tuesday night at a community crime prevention meeting at the Polo Senior Center. The signs are posted in the front windows of participating homes and businesses. (VINDE WELLS/vwells@shawnews.com)
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POLO – Police and other city leaders are presenting three programs designed to help citizens take back their town, which is in the grip of a crime spree nearly 6 months old.

Mayor Mark Scholl and Polo Chief Dennis Christen outlined the programs  – Neighborhood Watch, Helping Hand and Nixle, an electronic notification program – at a community meeting Tuesday attended by about 50 people.

Since June, there have been about 40 break-ins, mostly to homes and cars, in and around Polo. Some residents were in their homes when the burglars struck.

Scholl said the rash of burglaries, including several home invasions, has given the community a “black eye.”

“The purpose of this meeting is to come up with ideas to remove that black eye,” he said.

The programs:

Neighborhood Watch

A citywide program, requested by residents, will be formed, Scholl said.

A committee of three residents will define neighborhoods, identify block captains, and set a schedule of meetings to kick off the program.

“To be successful, this needs to be run by citizens,” he said. “And you need to cooperate with the police. This is not a vigilante group.”

People need to commit to the program, the mayor said.

“I don’t want you to get a false sense of security if crime decreases. It’s hard to measure the effectiveness of Neighborhood Watch and to know whether or not the crime stopped because of it,” he said. “If we decided to go with this program, we need to make sure it’s consistent in all neighborhoods.”

Ogle County Sheriff Greg Beitel has offered to provide training for the program, which was  launched nationwide in 1972 by the National Sheriffs’ Association.

Deb Wooldridge encouraged those in the the audience to sign up.

“If we pull together, I think we’re going to go a long way toward preventing some of the things that have been happening in this town,” she said.

“I think it’s a step forward in what we’re trying to accomplish,” he said. “We need to be proactive and do something before these things happen.”

Nixle

Nixle is being offered in response to citizens’ requests for better notification about crimes in the community, Scholl said.

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