Police Station Robbed

The Associated Press says thieves have robbed a police station in Carletonville, west of Johannesburg, South Africa, leaving nothing behind

“It’s a very bizarre situation,” [Democratic Alliance] police spokeswoman Dianne Kohler Barnard told AFP.

“We have a police station being robbed of everything. Stripped. It’s more than robbed. It’s absolutely gutted.”

She said the thieves had stolen toilets, cupboards, windows, doors and even the kitchen sink.

The station was meant to be guarded by private security paid by taxpayers. This is a great example of outsourcing failure. It raises the question of why the police did not guard it themselves.

On the other hand, while this might seem funny, there are worse stories. Sometimes even the police have trouble preventing a station robbery while they are in it. Trenton, NJ gives us an example from earlier this year.

A convicted thief walked past an unmanned security post at city police headquarters and made his way into the detective bureau, where he allegedly stole a cop radio, a computer monitor and a sergeant’s attache case.

[…]

“Security is a major concern here, but we have officers who prop doors open to what are supposed to be secure areas,” an officer said.

Last year in North Bend, OR a man kicked in a door at a police station and stole two tazers, a radio and took the keys to a police cruiser:

Finder, 26, faces just about every charge the police could think up, including burglary, possession of burglary tools, theft, unlawful use of a motor vehicle, unlawful entry into a motor vehicle, criminal mischief, criminal trespass, tampering with physical evidence and reckless driving, after he allegedly committed a brazen raid on the police station in downtown North Bend last Wednesday.

The difference in these three cases is that the latter two in America involved burglars who tried to sell stolen police equipment. The first case is far less likely to be prosecuted successfully as the goods stolen were regular office building furnishings.

Kenyans Block Ethiopian HydroPower

Ethiopia Insight reports that a Kenyan green group seeks ban on Ethiopian power

A Kenyan conservation group has appealed to the nation’s high court to prevent the government and an energy company from buying power produced by the vast Gibe 111 hydropower dam in neighboring Ethiopia.

The impact of the dam is in question. This is a familiar tune. The conservation groups in this scenario represent risk managers who are concerned that the dam will affect 500K people and their ability to live without aid.

A typical way to avoid this situation is for security and risk assessments to be done up front and with the support of risk managers. That does not seem to have been done here; risk assessments left until the project is underway are likely to bring significant new costs/impact into focus. At least concerns have been raised now instead of 2013, the expected completion date.

Google Maps and Bicycling

Google has released bicycling directions for their maps:

A quick look at their map shows a thin web of connections even for a city that claims to be bike friendly

What’s really missing is topology. Notice the weirdly isolated green lines at the intersection of California and Stockton in the upper left corner…it’s on a big hill, as you can see in the topographical map.

Google could integrate vertical distance as part of the calculation for optimal path. That would be innovative.

The SF bike coalition already provides an overlay of the Google data online, but they do not calculate the climb and descent.

All this combined with crime data, as I mentioned earlier, would make for an excellent bicycle map. You could have bike paths rated by elevation using theft, robbery, assault and actual topography.