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Police to Public: Bug Us Too Often, Expect a Bill

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IrishOutlaw Posted: Wed, Jan 23 2008 10:13 AM

  ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Anchorage police have begun sending bills to people if officers have to make more than eight trips per year to their homes.

The first homeowner to be billed under a law that allows police to charge people got a tab for $23,000 last week.

Police have been called to the home dozens of times since last summer and 10 times so far this year, they said.

An ordinance that took effect in 2002 calls for taxpayers to pay for the first eight police responses to a home in a year. After that, the homeowner may be charged $500 per visit, what police estimate it costs to pay officers and maintain equipment for a single call.

"We're trying to tell homeowners that if you're having an excessive amount of calls to your residence, you need to take responsibility for those calls," said Anchorage police Sgt. Denny Allen. "We're not encouraging people not to call the police for valid reasons."

Some problem homes are getting 90 or more calls a year, he said.

Police did not begin enforcing the ordinance until last summer. Getting police to do so was "like changing a battleship in midcourse," said Assemblyman Allan Tesche, who sponsored the law.

"The intent was to give the police an extra tool to be used against crack houses, drug houses and general public nuisances that are generating an inordinate number of police calls," Tesche said. "At some point, a city can and should start charging for overuse of its police department."

The ordinance does not affect businesses and excludes calls for medical emergencies and domestic violence. False alarms and receipts of false information do not count against a homeowner unless the reports were initiated by the owner or an occupant.

For rental properties, the owner is responsible for either controlling the tenants, evicting them or paying the bill, Tesche said. The police will first send a letter alerting the owner that fees are pending. The owner then has 30 days to correct the situation and halt the calls. After that, they'll get the bill.

At the Airport Heights home that was billed $23,000, calls were routinely for drugs, alcohol and disturbances, Allen said. Neighbors reported cars coming at all hours of night, with arguments in the yard and drunks urinating in the road.

Police sent the homeowner, Tammy Lynn Miller, 40, a warning notice in August. The calls for service persisted and on Thursday the city sent her the bill, Allen said.

Miller was arrested last week on charges of theft and forgery.

Her home is now boarded up being seized by the bank, Allen said. If she can't pay the city's bill, the ordinance calls for liens to be placed against the home until the city collects.

"We don't care if you pay it, we're going to get that money somehow," he said.

One other warning letter has been sent so far, Allen said. About a half dozen other homeowners being eyed as violators may have to clean up their acts or pay.

The intent of the law is that some offenders, including renters, will get the message that they will be penalized for their behavior and will get tired of moving or paying the bills, Tesche said.

"If you make it hard for people to stay, you're sending a message that you're going after them," he said. "It's not solving the problem, but it's helping."

 http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,324650,00.html

The Anarchists are simply unterrified Jeffersonian Democrats. They believe that 'the best government is that which governs least,' and that which governs least is no government at all.
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 It will never work. There is no way that market forces could ever provide for any type of security like a police force. Oh,,,,wait....

The Anarchists are simply unterrified Jeffersonian Democrats. They believe that 'the best government is that which governs least,' and that which governs least is no government at all.
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Solredime replied on Wed, Jan 23 2008 12:07 PM

It would be far easier if the police department charged ONLY those people who call, and not those who sort their own problems out themselves. THAT would be a fairer system. But then, that's called the free market.

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 I think something interesting was that the police charge the people who get called ON. Like, the neighbors call to complain about them and the person starts racking up charges. I think from a market standpoint there are a lot of interesting things about this article.

 Already, where I live, if you call the fire department or ambulance, expect a bill. Why not the police?

The Anarchists are simply unterrified Jeffersonian Democrats. They believe that 'the best government is that which governs least,' and that which governs least is no government at all.
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Ennio45 replied on Thu, Jan 24 2008 10:55 AM

 If emergency services bill people then they shouldn't get tax money. I mean, they shouldn't get tax money anyway, but with this plan they're basically extorting you twice. If this was in a free market (i.e. no taxes) then they still shouldn't be able to charge for services rendered on behalf of others (the neighbors who called). This does bring to mind some very interesting questions, though.

Smile  First Post Big Smile

"Away with every concern that is not altogether my concern? What's good, what's bad? Why, I myself am my concern and I am neither good nor bad. Neither has any meaning for me" Max Stirner
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Stranger replied on Thu, Jan 24 2008 12:07 PM

IrishOutlaw:

 I think something interesting was that the police charge the people who get called ON. Like, the neighbors call to complain about them and the person starts racking up charges. I think from a market standpoint there are a lot of interesting things about this article.

 Already, where I live, if you call the fire department or ambulance, expect a bill. Why not the police?

 

Echoes of Brazil. Soon you'll negotiate a mortgage to pay for your own torture. 

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JAlanKatz replied on Thu, Jan 24 2008 11:24 PM

Meanwhile:

 Public to Police:  Bug Us Too Often, Expect a Bill

Wait, that will never work, but imagine if it were tried?  If the entire population just sent a bill for $10 to their local police for "expenses related to securing against wiretaps."  Ah, just the thought...

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Public police is better than private police for poor people, because it costs less because of wealth redistribution. Private police has the right to defend against the killing of unborn children, but public police doesn't.
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Inquisitor replied on Fri, Jan 25 2008 10:56 AM
Yes, in political theory (given how poorly it corresponds to reality, this may be a misnomer) sure. In actuality, wealth redistribution is not from rich to poor but from productive to nonproductive. If we apply all the reasoning that applies to monopolies to the police, I fail to see how it benefits the poor - at all.

 

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Wealth redistribution can be defined being the redistribution of satisfaction from the rich to the poor. Eventually, genetic satisfaction would degenerate because we don't need such satisfaction for survival. Humans would evolve to be unemotional in the future. So the world collapses.

Wealth redistribbtion can be defined as a paradigm shift from investment to consumption. The rich need a constant supply food, water and shelter for survival. Therefore, confiscation from the rich would lead to greater porportion of consumption for the rich.

Wealth redistribution can be defined as the enforcement of a coercive monopoly. This gives the poor a monopoly on confiscation of satisfaction. Similar to patents which you are forced to buy patented medicine for survival.
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