Nothing will set back the resurgence of America's 24-hour cities more than rising violent crime.  Over the past 15 years, a strong national economy coupled with a dip in the late teen/young adult population and new policing methods tamped down on murders and robberies in many major cities. In particular New York transformed its menacing 1980s "Death Wish" reputation ("you don't want to go out at night or ride the subways") into a paragon of safe not mean streets.  Not coincidentally lowered crime rates has facilitated the ongoing "move back in" resulting in ever more vibrant urban scenes in Chicago, Washington  DC, Seattle, and even downtown LA and Atlanta.

Will the deepening recession and rising unemployment kick crime rates back into gear reversing recent urban gains? I raised that concern to a group of Chicago real estate leaders yesterday in an Emerging Trends briefing. I suggested the recent murders of Jennifer Hudson's family members had brought most unwelcome national headlines about Chicago crime and earlier in the week, national newscasts were proclaiming the Windy City as the nation's "murder capital," not exactly the stuff of Chamber of Commerce promotions. And I suggested local civic and business leaders should be getting concerned. In fact, it's been years since I heard news reports touting U.S. murder capitals (Detroit, Miami and DC all held the title at one time or another back in the mayhem filled 1980s and early 90s). 

Boy, did I get blow back from my local host --"people don't want to hear that," she said. "Don't mention that in your (Emerging Trends) speech (later in the day)." Another person at the roundtable discussion suggested that traffic congestion, improved schools and higher energy costs would keep people moving back into the city and offset potential higher crime rates. And she may be right. I pointed out that I raised the crime issue as one we all had to watch and be concerned about. It may not eventuate and look at what a great night Chicago experienced during the Obama rally in Grant Park on election night.   
Well, I made only a passing reference to crime in my speech, and no mention of murder capital or Jennifer Hudson. And in the evening after dinner I took a walk around the block with my sister-in-law with whom I was staying in her Lake Shore Drive apartment about 10 blocks north of the Drake. We bumped into a nattily dressed gentleman walking a small fluffy white pooch in front of a row of multi-million dollar brownstones smack in the middle of the ritzy Gold Coast neighborhood. My sister-in-law mentioned she hadn't seen him in a while. He said he is venturing out again. In July just where we were standing he was robbed at gun point.

     

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Jonathan D. Miller

A marketing communication strategist who turned to real estate analysis, Jonathan D. Miller is a foremost interpreter of 21st citistate futures – cities and suburbs alike – seen through the lens of lifestyles and market realities. For more than 20 years (1992-2013), Miller authored Emerging Trends in Real Estate, the leading commercial real estate industry outlook report, published annually by PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Urban Land Institute (ULI). He has lectures frequently on trends in real estate, including the future of America's major 24-hour urban centers and sprawling suburbs. He also has been author of ULI’s annual forecasts on infrastructure and its What’s Next? series of forecasts. On a weekly basis, he writes the Trendczar blog for GlobeStreet.com, the real estate news website. Outside his published forecasting work, Miller is a prominent communications/institutional investor-marketing strategist and partner in Miller Ryan LLC, helping corporate clients develop and execute branding and communications programs. He led the re-branding of GMAC Commercial Mortgage to Capmark Financial Group Inc. and he was part of the management team that helped build Equitable Real Estate Investment Management, Inc. (subsequently Lend Lease Real Estate Investments, Inc.) into the leading real estate advisor to pension funds and other real institutional investors. He joined the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U.S. in 1981, moving to Equitable Real Estate in 1984 as head of Corporate/Marketing Communications. In the 1980's he managed relations for several of the country's most prominent real estate developments including New York's Trump Tower and the Equitable Center. Earlier in his career, Miller was a reporter for Gannett Newspapers. He is a member of the Citistates Group and a board member of NYC Outward Bound Schools and the Center for Employment Opportunities.