You are reading

Queens Park Enforcement Left to Fewer than 30 officers

Astoria Park Alliance

Astoria Park Alliance

June 22, 2015 By Jackie Strawbridge

With the Parks Department having less than 30 employees in Queens to enforce crime and park rules, residents are grappling with the Sisyphean task of keeping the borough’s green space safe and clean.

According to the Parks Department, just 28 Parks Enforcement Patrol officers are assigned to patrol Queens parks.

These officers are stationed out of Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Rockaway and Forest Park. They conduct patrols in pairs throughout the borough, and are responsible for crowd control, administering first aid, and, crucially, issuing summonses or making arrests.

Last week, Community Board 1 passed a resolution calling for PEP officers to be on site at all times in Astoria parks, or if that is impossible, calling for Park Supervisors to be given the power to issue summonses, which they currently cannot.

The board seeks more officers to address violations that consistently plague area parks, such as leaving dog waste, bike riding on pedestrian paths and dumping household garbage into park cans.

“The only viable way to control these issues is the issuance of summonses, so park patrons actually pay a price for illegal behavior,” CB 1 Parks Committee Chairman Richard Khuzami said.

The Parks Department did not address CB 1’s specific requests when asked for comment, but instead defined park safety and cleanliness as a community effort.

“It is incumbent upon all park visitors to treat our City’s green spaces with respect, and educate one another on proper park behavior, particularly when it comes to littering,” Queens Parks Commissioner Dorothy Lewandowski said in an emailed statement. “We actively work with the Community Board and local civic groups to spread this message, and we’re grateful for their help.”

According to Detective Edwin Negron of the 114 Precinct, the NYPD handles the majority of crimes in and around parks, after calls come through 911 or 311.

“[Parks’] resources are extremely limited,” Detective Edwin Negron of the 114 Precinct said. “We help them out any way we can.”

Police are occasionally stationed within parks; for example, the 114 keeps a small handful of officers at the Astoria Park pool during the summer.

CB 1 is not the only entity pushing for a stronger enforcement presence in Queens parks.

“Astoria Park Alliance has been an early advocate for an increase in presence of PEP officers city wide,” APA co-chair Jordan Dyniewski said. “Outside of increased PEP and NYPD presence, we have yet to discover a sustainable solution that takes into account the various agencies and stakeholders.”

“Otherwise, we, as parks users, must continue educating the public and leading by example, which we [in APA] seek to do through volunteer opportunities and other free programming offered in the park,” he continued.

Dyniewski added that the Alliance supports the part of the CB 1 resolution that calls for increased enforcement, and will be discussing the resolution as a group at their upcoming meeting.

The City Council also pushed Mayor Bill de Blasio to include more funding for PEP officers in response to his FY 2016 Budget.

“I am pleased that we have the support of CB 1 on this issue,” Councilman Costa Constantinides told the Astoria Post. “I look forward to continuing to work with my City Council colleagues to ensure that we hire additional PEP officers.”

According to recent testimony from the Council’s Parks Committee Chairman Mark Levine (D-Manhattan), the Mayor’s budget includes $5 million to prevent PEP layoffs Citywide.

Less than 200 PEP officers patrol all New York City parks, according to City Council documents.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Fall fun in western Queens: Your guide to the best seasonal events

Aug. 29, 2025 By Jessica Militello

With beach days and summer BBQs behind us, the start of September rings in the start of magnificent Fall foliage, Halloween and more fun activities that come with the start of Autumn, including a list of Fall events in the area. From apple picking to seasonal ciders and more, there is tons to explore in the community. From Mystic Markets to scary movie meet-ups and more, here is a list of Fall events you do not want to miss.

Fresh Meadows MS-13 gang associate sentenced to nearly a half-century in prison for murder of Corona teen in Kissena Park: Feds

An MS-13 gang associate from Fresh Meadows was sentenced to 45 years in federal prison on Tuesday, Aug. 26, for the 2018 slaying of a Corona teenager in Flushing’s Kissena Park.

Juan Amaya-Ramirez, 27, and his co-defendant Oscar Flores-Mejia, 25, from Elmhurst, who is also an associate of the transnational criminal organization, pleaded guilty to the murder of 17-year-old Andy Peralta in Brooklyn federal court last September.

AG’s office launches investigation into death of man run over by police officer in Flushing Meadows Corona Park

The New York Attorney General’s Office of Special Investigations (OSI) has launched a probe into the death of a civilian on Saturday, Aug. 23, following a motor vehicle collision involving NYPD officers in Flushing Meadows Corona Park.

At approximately 4:37 p.m., an NYPD officer from the 110th Precinct in Elmhurst was driving westbound in a marked police cruiser, a 2015 Ford Taurus, at around 10 miles per hour in front of the Queens Theater on United Nations Avenue South, across from the Unisphere, when the vehicle ran over a man who was allegedly lying face up on the roadway prior to the collision, police said.