A 6-year-old Park Slope girl is facing a $300 fine from the city for doing what city kids have been doing for decades: drawing a pretty picture with common sidewalk chalk.
Obviously not all of Natalie Sheas 10th Street neighbors thought her blue chalk splotch was her best work a neighbor called 311 to report the graffiti, and the Department of Sanitation quickly sent a standard letter to Natalies mom, Jen Pepperman.
Can somebody stop these bureaucrats before they Kafka again?
PLEASE REMOVE THE GRAFFITI FROM YOUR PROPERTY, the Sanitation Department warning letter read. FAILURE TO COMPLY & MAY RESULT IN ENFORCEMENT ACTION AGAINST YOU.
Since when is a kids chalk drawing graffiti? Since the City Council passed local law 111 in 2005, which defined graffiti as any letter, word, name, number, symbol, slogan, message, drawing, picture, writing & that is drawn, painted, chiseled, scratched, or etched on a commercial building or residential building.
In other words, Natalie Shea is not an artistic little girl, but a graffiti scofflaw?
No. The law goes on to say that the scribbles can only be called graffiti if they are not consented to by the owner of the commercial building or residential building. But how could the 311 caller possibly be expected to know if Natalie had her moms consent to use chalk on her own front stoop?
He could have just asked! Pepperman said. This whole thing is ridiculous. Admittedly, this drawing was not her best work she usually sticks to cheerful scenes, not abstracts, frankly but to send a warning letter like that is outrageous.
Pepperman ticked off any number of daily insults to common decency on her block, including (but not limited to) dog poop, garbage from ill-kept homes, and noise from car alarms. But Sanitation didnt get a 311 call about those indignities. It got a call about a 6-year-olds drawing.
The report came in as graffiti, and, as you know, the city is trying to crack down on graffiti on private property, said agency spokeswoman Cathy Dawkins.
Its a standard warning letter, added Dawkins. The property owner has 45 days to remove it or ask the city to remove it. Well inspect after that, and if the graffiti is still there, the property owner has another 60 days before well write a summons.
For sidewalk chalk that would dissolve at the first rain? Dawkins said the law is on her agencys side.
The instrument used whether its paint or chalk does not matter, she said.
But if Dawkins is right, than the city has just criminalized hopscotch or drawing arrows to point neighbors towards a stoop sale down the block as long as a neighbor calls 311 to complain.
In reality, chalkers have little reason to start using invisible ink. The citys pre-eminent sidewalk chalk illustrator, Ellis Gallagher, says hes outlining street furniture and other objects for years and never been arrested.
Cops stop me all the time when they see me drawing on the sidewalk, but once they see its just chalk, they always let me go, said Gallagher, a Carroll Gardens resident (see his work at
www.myspace.com/ellis_gee).
Gallagher believes that, despite local law 111, drawing in chalk is not illegal. But a call to the NYPD revealed that theres a lot of gray area.
According the New York penal law, graffiti is the etching, painting, covering, drawing or otherwise placing of a mark upon public or private property with intent to damage such property, said an NYPD spokesman.
When pressed to define intent or, for that matter, damage, the spokesman added: If it can be washed away, its not graffiti, clearly, but it still could be criminal mischief. If I cover your car with mustard, thats not graffiti, but its also not legal.
Pepperman is holding firm that her daughter is a pretty artist and not a petty criminal.
And for his part, Natalies father, George Shea, hoped that his daughter wouldnt learn the wrong lesson from her graffiti crime wave.
I do love that kid, Shea said, but I wish she would stop capping my tags.