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Sunday, February 8, 2015

(post gazette) - Monroeville Mall's Youth Escort Policy has been used elsewhere


Monroeville Mall is the latest in a string of shopping malls nationwide to put into place a policy that requires adults to accompany minors during weekend evening hours.
The policy comes in the wake of a shooting in the mall's Macy’s over the weekend that left three wounded, as well as a recent robbery and a December incident in which large numbers of teens converged on the mall and caused a disturbance.
Monroeville Mall’s general manager, Tom Gerber, announced plans Sunday for implementing a Youth Escort Policy to “curtail the rising number of unsupervised youth hanging out at Monroeville Mall and related disturbances.”
Beginning sometime this month, mall visitors after 6 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays who are under 18 years old will have to be accompanied by an individual who is at least 21.
Stacey Keating, corporate marketing specialist for CBL & Associates Properties Inc., which owns and manages the mall, said this policy was in the works prior to Saturday’s shooting and enforcement is scheduled to begin in March.
“It’s a conversation we’ve been having at Monroeville for about a month now, and in light of recent events we decided to fast-track the implementation of the policy,” she said.
The launch date of the policy is yet to be finalized and there were no details on how it would be enforced.
However, CBL Properties has implemented the same policy at other shopping centers, including River View Mall in Lynchburg, Va., and Lakeshore Mall in Sebring, Fla. Enforcement includes security guards checking for identification at mall entrances.
Monroeville Mall is the latest of many malls implementing such policies. Malls with similar policies include Franklin Park Mall in Toledo, Ohio; Tri-County Mall in Cincinnati; Ford City Mall in Chicago; the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn.; and 25 of CBL Properties’ shopping centers.
Franklin Park Mall and Ford City Mall both started their policies in January, making them two of the most recent additions.
Ford City had a February 2014 disturbance similar to that at Monroeville Mall in December, with a mob of teenagers running through the mall and parking lot and jumping on cars. Nineteen teenagers were arrested and two people were injured. Though no additional incidents occurred between February and Ford City’s implementation of the policy last month, mall officials described it as a precautionary measure in response to teens fighting at malls across the country.
Franklin Park also called its policy a proactive rather than a reactive measure.
Several malls have even stricter policies than Monroeville Mall’s planned restrictions. Franklin Park Mall’s policy begins at 4 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, and the MacArthur Center in Norfolk, Va., prohibits unsupervised minors from entering the premises after 5 p.m. all seven days of the week.
The Mall of America was the first to implement such a policy in 1996, though its policy only applies to those under 16.
According to the CBL news release: “The conduct of unsupervised youth and young adults at Monroeville Mall has created an uncomfortable atmosphere for mall visitors and an increasing safety challenge.”
Significant to the policy’s development was feedback from local government officials and community members, particularly shoppers and store employees who have expressed safety concerns, according to the release.
Employees under 18 will be issued special identification allowing them to remain in the mall unsupervised on weekend nights. Once they have clocked out of work, the same general public rules will apply to them, as well.
The release also states that the mall will continue to partner with community groups to ensure the establishment of supervised youth activities outside of visiting the mall.
Jill Harkins: jharkins@post-gazette.com or 412-263-3772

http://www.post-gazette.com/local/east/2015/02/09/Monroeville-Mall-announces-Youth-Escort-Policy-not-a-new-concept/stories/201502090046

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