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Glendale: Keeping Hate Off The Walls

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  • Glendale: Keeping Hate Off The Walls

    KEEPING HATE OFF THE WALLS
    By Veronica Rocha

    Glendale News Press
    March 18 2009
    CA

    Employee removes graffiti as fast as possible to keep residents from
    being offended.

    CENTRAL GLENDALE -- City employee Javier Covarrubias sprayed a
    solvent liquid on "hate graffiti" and gang-related graffiti Tuesday
    spray-painted on an exterior wall at the First Evangelical Church
    on Broadway.

    Church leaders found profanity directed at Armenians spray-painted
    in red along a brick wall, next to black gang tagging Saturday morning.

    The hate graffiti was the eighth marking of its kind Covarrubias
    removed in the city in two days, he said.

    Covarrubias and another city employee cleaned markings off of 250,691
    square feet at 2,650 sites for the 2007-08 fiscal year, said John
    Brownell, the city's Neighborhood Services supervisor. So far this
    fiscal year, they have removed about 150,000 square feet of graffiti
    off of 1,828 sites throughout the city, he said.

    "We are probably in line to either meet or exceed the past year's
    total," Brownell said.

    Police have received six reports of hate graffiti -- defined as
    graffiti directed at a particular ethnic, religious or other group
    -- since Monday, and the department's Special Enforcement Detail and
    Gang Detail are investigating the incidents, Glendale Police Sgt. Tom
    Lorenz said.

    "There has been an increase of graffiti that may be directed toward
    ethnic gangs," he said.

    The hate graffiti was likely committed by an individual or a group,
    Lorenz said. The graffiti appeared as though it was committed by
    young people, he said.

    "They certainly aren't sophisticated," Lorenz said.

    Police have evidence that will likely lead to arrests in connection
    with the graffiti incidents, he said.

    Hate graffiti is a rare sight around town, Lorenz said.

    Covarrubias removed graffiti Monday from Colorado Street and Pacific
    Avenue, Chevy Chase Drive and Glendale Avenue and Broadway and Verdugo
    Road, he said.

    He keeps track of graffiti he removes and passes the information on
    to police for investigations, Covarrubias said.

    Most of the graffiti on the church's exterior wall was removed Tuesday
    after Covarrubias sprayed the solvent, scrubbed it with a brush and
    used a steam-pressurized washer to clean off the spray paint.

    Covarrubias was going to go back later to remove the remaining
    markings, he said.

    He cleans 15 to 20 sites a day, Covarrubias said.

    And city officials say they have recently seen a spike in
    billboard-sized gang or tagging crew graffiti in the southern portion
    of the city.

    Larger markings, which were 50 to 60 feet long and 8 feet tall,
    have been spray-painted on public and private properties since the
    beginning of the year, Brownell said. The massive markings have become
    more common than smaller tagging, which was often seen in past years,
    he said.

    Covarrubias and another city employee try to remove gang and hate
    graffiti within 24 hours, Brownell said. Hate markings can be offensive
    to community members and seen by children, and gang graffiti can
    start conflicts between rival gangs, he said.

    Other graffiti is usually removed within 48 hours on city property,
    and private property owners are given 10 days to remove the markings.

    "We just try to take it down as quickly as we can," he said.

    Removing the graffiti has become easier in recent years because city
    staff members have started using a water-soluble liquid, Covarrubias
    said.

    He used a sandblaster before, which often left him covered in sand
    at the end of a work day, he said.

    The water-soluble liquid is better for the environment and his health,
    said Covarrubias, who last year won the city's Rosie Award, given to
    employees who exemplify devotion to customer service.

    In his nine years with the city, a vandal has never approached him
    while he removed graffiti, he said.

    "Glendale is a safe city," Covarrubias said. "[Residents] know that
    we are out there helping them."

    But when he was working in Pacoima, two gang members in two separate
    incidents pointed guns at him and told him to stop removing the
    graffiti, Covarrubias said.

    He often considers the risk in removing graffiti from properties.

    "I think about it now because I have a little boy," he said.

    But Covarrubias said he is doing what is best for the city.

    "I am keeping the bling in the jewel city," he said.
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