The closed Northwest Police Station at 2330 W. Sylvania Ave. Toledo Free Press photo by JOSEPH HERR

Hundreds of Toledo residents want their neighborhood police station back, but a leader of the campaign to reopen it says the city administration staff is giving him and the petition signers “the cold shoulder.”
Retired city finance director John Bibish handed a petition to the mayor’s office Aug. 13 with 575 signatures to request that police activity return to the closed station at 2330 W. Sylvania Ave.
The Northwest District station closed in late June, following a few years of limited police work conducted in the building. The station opened in 1997 with 104 officers.
The city closed the station citing financial reasons, but Bibish pointed out at a news conference that the administration intended to add $1.9 million to the budget with money the city saved from projects that came under budget or originally allocated for matching grants that the city did not receive.
“If there’s an additional $2 million available, isn’t it reasonable to ask if some of that money could be used for the Northwest station, specifically for police protection in  general?” Bibish asked.
Council voted on the amended budget Tuesday, with no allocations for the Northwest District station. Jen Sorgenfrei, spokesperson for the mayor’s office, said there are just no police officers to send. When the station opened, the entire force employed about 700 officers. Now there are 575.
“It is a sad day in the city of Toledo when citizens have to come with a petition asking to  return a public safety delivery system that they have been accustomed to,” Councilman D. Michael Collins said.
Mayor Mike Bell’s administration attempted to sell the old station this summer, but Council members voted down the sale 10 to 2.
“It could have been an operating business generating income for the tax base and now its vacant and could be a nuisance,” Sorgenfrei said.
Waniewski said the Northwest District is not in a “tipping point” area, but that the neighborhood could deteriorate without a police station.
“If the police are not there, then we will become a tipping point,” Waniewski said. “Why can’t we become more proactive in making sure the neighborhoods don’t deteriorate?
Why do we have to wait until it’s gone too far before we start to funnel the dollars in?”
Sgt. Joe Heffernan said the Northwest District typically has some of the lowest crime rates in the city. He said the Toledo Police Department will still assign the same number of officers to that area. The only difference that residents will notice, he said, is that they won’t be able to go to that office and make a police report.
“That is a myth,” said former Capt. Jeff Hennessy.
He said that the area will not see as many police officers as it had when a station was present because the districts are so large and because a station guaranteed that officers would stay in the neighborhood.
“Historically, if you were short that day, the first officers you pulled would be the West End because you were hoping against hope that nothing would happen out there,” Hennessy said. “That was the beauty with the Northwest station: You had X number of officers assigned to the station, so if you had extra officers that day, they stayed there. They
didn’t go Downtown, they didn’t go to Scott Park. They stayed there.”

Previous articleSports village planned for former mall site
Next articleMiller: Wings in Heaven