The Houston Police Department and the Greater Houston Retailers Association (GHRA) received the 2014 Michael Shanahan Award for Excellence in Public-Private Cooperation from the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) and the Security Industry Association (SIA) on Oct. 26 during a ceremony in Orlando, Fla.
The Shanahan Award recognizes outstanding achievement in the development and implementation of public-private cooperation in public safety. The Houston Police Department and the Greater Houston Retailers Association (GHRA) were honored for a program that dramatically reduced violent crime at convenience stores.
The program began in 2007, when robberies, aggravated assaults and murders at the city’s convenience stores reached record levels. The police department formed a Convenience Store Task Force, and a 2008 ordinance required all convenience stories in the city to register with the task force, at no charge, and to implement certain security measures, including installing video surveillance and alarm systems, using drop safes and working with the police to enforce trespassing laws.
Between 2007 and 2013, murders at those locations dropped by 70 percent; sexual assaults, 75 percent; robberies, 71 percent; aggravated assaults, 59 percent; burglary, 72 percent; and thefts and shoplifting, 82 percent.
“By forming a task force made up of all the community stakeholders, the Houston Police Department has forged a lasting partnership with the convenience stores in Houston based on strong, two-way communication,” the police department and GHRA stated. “Police and convenience store owners now rely on each other to make an impact on crime at convenience stores.”
The award honors the late Chief Michael Shanahan, who served the University of Washington Police Department for 24 years before retiring in 1995.