Click here to view La Crosse Area Weather
Home > News > Story
 Advertisement 

Published - Thursday, May 15, 2008

POST COMMENT | READ COMMENTS (11 comment(s))

City, business owners get aggressive with graffiti


.
Debra Lash has painted the garage behind her Main Street building twice in the past year to cover up graffiti. She’s getting ready to paint it again after getting tagged over the weekend.

On Wednesday morning, she was in the alley with a can of Goof Off scrubbing blue spray paint off the 113-year-old bricks of the former YWCA that houses her Wedding Tree business.
Deb Lash, owner of The Wedding Tree, scrubs graffiti off the wall of her building. Erik Daily

It’s a routine she says has become more common in recent years.

At the opposite end of the alley, Deb Neitzel’s building has a variety of markings.

“We have black, white, blue and gold,” she said. Neitzel said she has been waiting for warm weather to paint because the building is a historic landmark and she can’t pressure wash or use chemicals.

Downtown business owners are frustrated by what they say is a growing amount of graffiti, which they are required to clean up. One is even offering a cash reward in hopes someone will finger the culprit.

Now the city has launched a new anti-graffiti plan that will require them to remove the graffiti even faster.

Bud Miyamoto doesn’t mince words about graffiti. The executive director of Downtown Mainstreet Inc. says it is “a serious crime” that makes a bad impression on visitors and makes it harder to attract new businesses.

“It’s a crime on the entire community,” he said.

Miyamoto said the problem has gotten worse in the past three years.

“It used to be in the alleys,” said city Planning Director Larry Kirch. “Now it’s showing up on the fronts of buildings. It’s showing up on Main Street and Third Street and Fourth Street.”

This week Kirch is sending downtown property owners an anti-graffiti brochure urging them to report and document all graffiti — and to remove it within 24 hours.

That’s one of the most effective deterrents to more graffiti, Kirch said.

Conventional wisdom says graffiti attracts graffiti. And prompt removal denies taggers the thrill of seeing their work displayed.

A city ordinance requires property owners to remove graffiti from their buildings; it’s up to building inspectors to determine a reasonable time. That’s generally been about a week.

The city plans to hold up its end of the deal by promptly removing graffiti on public property, Kirch said. Parking police will carry paint removal chemicals in their Jeeps and will be expected to stop and clean up tags on street signs, light poles and other city property.

Last year, the city applied for an anti-graffiti grant from Keep America Beautiful’s Graffiti Hurts program. It didn’t make the cut, but the preparation helped raise community awareness, said Scott Reber, the city’s grant writer.

Reber is applying again for the grant, though he acknowledges that La Crosse is an underdog because the problem isn’t as bad as places such as the Twin Cities and Milwaukee.

Catching the culprits

Police caught a suspected tagger Sunday morning after a citizen alerted an officer. Nicholas Dygert, 23, faces misdemeanor graffiti charges. He’s accused of painting on five buildings including Lash’s. Police say additional charges will come if they can match the paint Dygert was carrying to other buildings.

In the past 12 months, La Crosse police had 107 reports of graffiti, of which 37 resulted in arrests.

“It’s not kids,” Capt. Gary Uting said of the culprits. “A lot of the suspects we’re arresting are in their early 20s.”

Uting and others say that most of La Crosse’s graffiti is mischievous self-expression rather than gang-related.

Steve Harm isn’t waiting for police to catch whoever painted three elaborate tags on the walls of his building at Fourth and Pearl streets.

Harm, who runs the all-ages music venue The Warehouse, is offering $250 for information leading to the prosecution of the perpetrator. He covered up the tags, but not before posting pictures of them on his Web site, where he criticized them as “low-talent, first graders with paint type graffiti.”

Harm admits that he was trying to antagonize the taggers in hopes of luring them back to the scene of the crime.

“I can appreciate that it’s art,” he said. “But if I was a performance artist who specialized in smashing glass, I don’t think police would appreciate it if I walked down the street smashing store windows.”



Chris Hubbuch can be reached at at (608) 791-8217 or at chubbuch@lacrossetribune.com.
.
 Advertisement 
 Tell us what you think...

 Comments »

Willie wrote on May 16, 2008 12:00 AM:

" Stina03, it is all good until they tag your property isn't it? Then you would want the cops to drop everything and catch the culprit. "

Stina03 wrote on May 15, 2008 7:37 PM:

" I think that our tax money can be better used going after serious crimes. You know the ones that are harmful to actual people. Real criminals. Graffiti looks bad, sure, but I would feel safer if they were going after and punishing people will dangerous acts. They are going to hang a guy who had one stupid drunk night with not even a single thing on his record besides this stupid act. Ridiculous. My money is well spent. Way to go La Crosse. News must be slow. "

ad4mj9381 wrote on May 15, 2008 12:10 PM:

" i live downtown... and every time crossfire or whatever it is called has one of its "community events"... i get cluster of deliquent kids all over near my home... and wouldnt ya know it mysteriously new graffiti shows up at the same time... maybe they should start there! "

Willie wrote on May 15, 2008 9:27 AM:

" In the vernacular of young people: tagging is gay. "

Willie wrote on May 15, 2008 9:25 AM:

" The taggers that get caught should have to remove them. If more graffiti appears in the mean time, oh well, the culprits will only have to scrub harder. What ever happened to community service? With 37 arrests there should be no shortage of scrubbers and the can get on top of it within a day or two. I guess they are all at home on the bracelet. "

Willie wrote on May 15, 2008 9:18 AM:

" If the business owners have a week to remove the graffiti so it doesn't draw more taggers and denies them the "thrill" of seeing their tag, why does your video clip immortalize these tags? I know the press ain't smart, they just report. "

Senior Advocate wrote on May 15, 2008 8:59 AM:

" How about some cameras around targeted areas. Add a citizens watch group then instigate a good old ass whoopin, no police needed then. :) "

OG wrote on May 15, 2008 8:49 AM:

" Let's get together as a community & tag the town so we can get some government grants! "

rfield wrote on May 15, 2008 7:03 AM:

" This article is written so that it sounds like it's the building owner's fault that someone sprayed graffiti on their building. "

Mack wrote on May 15, 2008 6:40 AM:

" Never say never. "

Willie wrote on May 14, 2008 11:59 PM:

" Graffiti is never art unless it is sanctioned by the owner of the property it is painted on. "


PLEASE NOTE: Comments on stories that frequently update through the day disappear with each update.
The comments above are from readers. In no way do they represent the views of the La Crosse Tribune.

Click here to report offensive or inappropriate comments. Please identify the comment you're concerned about, the story to which the comment was attached, the date of the comment and the person who made the post.

 Post a comment (150 word limit) »

Log In - If you have already signed up with The LaCrosse Tribune, please sign in now!
Member ID:
*Password:
  Forgot Your Password?
 
Sign Up - To encourage intelligent and meaningful conversation, The LaCrosse Tribune requires all commenters to register before posting comments. It's quick, it's easy, and it's free! Just fill in the information below to get started!

**Your Member ID and password will be required to log in. Your comments will appear under your user name.

Do not use usernames or passwords from your financial accounts!

Note: Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required!

Create a Member ID:
*Choose a password:
*Re-enter password:
E-mail Address:
Year of Birth:
 

(children under 13 cannot register)

First Name:
Last Name:
Company:
Home Phone:
Business Phone:
Address:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
 

NEWSPAPER ADS

LACROSSE JOBS

TOP HOMES

 
 
Dailies
La Crosse Tribune
Winona Daily News

Weeklies
Coulee News
The Chronicle
Holmen Courier
Houston County News
Onalaska Life
Tomah Journal
Vernon Broadcaster
Westby Times

Regional
Inside Preps
My LIVE! Entertainment
Best of River Valley
Business Report
Healthy Living Today
Strictly Golf
River Valley Bike Trails
River Valley Blogs
River Valley Outdoors

Shoppers
Tri-County Foxxy

Marketplace
Newspaper Ads
Local Website Directory
7 Rivers Rentals
HomeSeller
Wheels Website
Outdoor Motors
Work For You

Portals
La Crosse NET
Winona NET

Classifieds
River Valley Classifieds

Links
Lee Enterprises

About Us | Classifieds | Contact Us | Terms of Use | F.A.Q. | Privacy Policy | Requests | Search | RSS | Videos | Advertiser Directory | Add to My Yahoo!
Copyright © 1997 - 2008 The La Crosse Tribune. All rights reserved.
Material from this site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or distributed. A Lee Enterprises subsidiary.