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When I lived in Utah, most citizens appeared to be at least nominally Mormon. It is the fashion to decry the influence of the Mormon church in Utah, but as the number of non-Mormons has grown by leaps and bounds, so, apparently, has the crime rate.
And it seems that the MORE social programs we have, at least here in our state, the worse things become.
Somehow, we must find a solution to this issue. If it is fathers in the home, education, etc. how do we address the fact that many "fathers" don't want to be in the home, that many young women don't object to having children without the support of the children's fathers, and many young people don't want to become educated?
There is a whole culture in America today that decries the idea of working for a living, feels no loyalty it the community, and that seems totally bent on filling immediate physical wants and needs. Since we must be value-neutral in all our education and programs, how do we address that?
It is unfortunate that city leaders continue to not pass laws that could strenthen their city by putting stricter rules on renters. Until this happens,South Salt Lake will continue to have problems. (This is so unfortunate given the fact that South Salt Lake is so close to everything, and has such affordable housing.)
Point #2: SSL, like SLC has a large increase in its daily population from workers and customers within its borders. Controlling for this might paint a very different picture of crime there, or anywhere. Using residents as the only criteria necessarily skews the data which leads, as in this case, to erroneous conclusions about what the data says.
The drug war diverts those resources from protecting citizens against those who commit crimes against persons and property.
Try using the 2006 U.S. Census Bureau population estimates.
The figures will come out much differently.
I'd also like to see the reporter put out a larger list so i can see other towns that didn't fall in the top 10 and see where the divide starts.
Ignoring the issue won't make it go away and won't make our streets any safer.
Whatever.