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PCAgenda_94Feb28
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PCAgenda_94Feb28
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areas studied without an adult use(s). The study found a close link between crime <br />and the residential character of the neighborhood with adult uses nearby. In the <br />residential areas with adult use(s), crime frequencies were 56% higher than in the <br />commercial areas without an adult use(s). <br />The research also found that although the housing base in the study area with an <br />adult use(s) was of a distinctly higher value than the control areas without the <br />adult use(s), the study area's value appreciated at half the rate of the control areas <br />between 1979 and 1982. <br />The Indianapolis Study cited the results of a national survey done using a random <br />sample of 20% of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers and a sampling <br />of Member Appraisers Institute (MAI) to determine the impact of adult uses on <br />surrounding property values. The survey results found that: <br />1. Survey respondents overwhelmingly (80 percent) felt that an adult <br />bookstore located in the hypothetical neighborhood described in the <br />survey would have a negative impact on residential property values of <br />premises located within one block of the site. <br />2. Seventy-two percent of the respondents also felt that there would be <br />a detrimental effect on commercial property values at the same one <br />block radius. <br />. 3. This negative impact dissipates markedly as the distance from the site <br />increases, so that at three blocks a negative impact on residential <br />property continued, but the degree of impact had decreased by more <br />than one-half as judged by the number of respondents indicating <br />negative impact at three blocks. <br />Study 3. Citv of St. Paul Minnesota (1987 1988! <br />A third study prepared by the City of St. Paul Planning and Economic Development <br />Department analyzed population and crime characteristics of a St. Paul <br />neighborhood, the University -Dale neighborhood, where a number of adult uses <br />were located to determine the secondary impacts from these businesses. The <br />study found that the neighborhood exhibited many signs of distress including the <br />highest unemployment rate in the city, the highest percentage of families below <br />the poverty line, the lowest median family income and the lowest percentage of <br />high school and college graduates. The study hypothesized that the adult uses lead <br />to prostitution which then lead to other types of crime. The study found that the <br />city's highest number of prostitution arrests occurred at five intersections near the <br />University and Dale intersection. The residents in the University and Dale <br />• 3 <br />
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