The police officers who patrol Kensington will hold their next Build the Block meeting on Tuesday, November 19th, from 2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m., to address the safety concerns of neighborhood residents.
Kensington residents will meet with the Neighborhood Coordination Officers of the 66th Precinct Sector D (Kensington) at Christ Apostolic Church.
From time to time, the Build the Block meeting times, dates, and locations change. Call the 66th Precinct at (718) 851-5611 and speak to a Neighborhood Coordination Officer to verify that the meeting information is correct.
"These "Build the Block" neighborhood safety meetings are strategy sessions between local police officers and the people they serve. The meetings have two simple goals: identify the public safety challenges of a specific neighborhood and discuss potential solutions."
The Neighborhood Coordination Officers for Sector D are PO Jennifer Desanto (jennifer.desanto@nypd.org) and PO Ben Hua (ben.hua@nypd.org).
"Neighborhood Policing is "a comprehensive crime-fighting strategy built on improved communication and collaboration between local police officers and community residents. Neighborhood Policing greatly increases connectivity and engagement with the community without diminishing, and, in fact, improving the NYPD's crime-fighting capabilities.
The same officers work in the same neighborhoods on the same shifts, increasing their familiarity with local residents and local problems."
To find out when Build the Block meetings are scheduled, go to https://www1.nyc.gov/site/nypd/bureaus/patrol/find-your-meeting.page and enter your street address.
At this Build The Block neighborhood policing and safety meeting, the officers will update residents about neighborhood public safety issues. They'll answer your questions and listen to your concerns about assaults and robberies on the street, home burglaries, packages stolen from porches and lobbies, street safety for drivers, pedestrians, bicyclists, and e-bicyclists and any other issues that are on your mind.
NYPD precincts are divided into sectors as part of the policing model known as "community policing." The same officers work in the same neighborhoods on the same shifts. The radio dispatchers, supervisors, and sector officers work together. Sector officers and sector cars stay within the boundaries of their assigned sectors, except in precinct-wide emergencies.