Imagine No Graffiti

PHOTO: Thomas MacMillanFor years, a message sprawled on the concrete wall next to the Naugatuck River in Ansonia has asked Why Lennon?” 

Alderman John Marini wants to silence it once and for all.

Marini is kicking off an anti-graffiti push by taking aim at the Why Lennon?” question, which is painted on the wall in big red block letters. The graffiti has been up for decades, as a plaintive response to the premature death of John Lennon, who was killed in 1980. 

It’s been painted over many times, but always reappears, officials said.

Marini, who was last year elected as Ansonia’s first Republican alderman in a decade, said it’s time for the question to be erased for the last time. 

It’s been 30 years since Lennon was assassinated,” he said. An answer is not forthcoming.”

The Big Picture

But Marini’s crusade against graffiti is not just about Why Lennon?” The larger issue, he said, is that graffiti is a demoralizing, destructive force in Ansonia. It gives people the wrong impression of the city and enables other crime, he said.

In a recent interview on Riverside Drive, across from the wall, Marini said he’s looking into options for removing graffiti that exists and preventing future graffiti from going up. He said he wants to craft an anti-graffiti ordinance for the city. 

Graffiti along the river wall is a serious deterrent to business and investment,” Marini said. It’s basically garbage lining the gateway.”

PHOTO: Thomas MacMillanThe wall is covered with tags and throw-ups from writers like Sic” and others, along with paint spots where graffiti has been covered up. Marini said he suspects some of the graffiti might be gang-related. 

Marini said he’s taking a two-pronged approach to the graffiti: First, remove what’s there; then, prevent it from returning.

He brought up his plans at a Board of Aldermen meeting last week. 

Mayor James Della Volpe explained the city’s long-time fight with graffiti — especially the Why Lennon” piece. The city keeps painting over or removing the graffiti. Vandals keep putting it back up. 

Della Volpe said new lighting at the near-by train station might act as a deterrent in the future. 

Marini said he’s getting a free estimate to see how much it will cost to remove existing graffiti, possibly with water-blasting. He then plans to look for grants or private donations to pay for graffiti removal. Marini said he is committed to not passing costs on to Ansonia taxpayers.

As for prevention, Marini said the best strategy is rapid removal. People who paint on walls are often doing it for attention and recognition, Marini said. If their graffiti is removed within 24 or 48 hours, they’re robbed of the attention they crave and they’ll soon give up, Marini said.

PHOTO: Thomas MacMillanThe alderman said graffiti-resistant coatings and the installation of lights are also good options. The river wall is completely dark at night, he said, which allows people to paint without being caught. The city could also look into preventing public access to the wall, Marini said.

Ansonia does not currently have a good anti-graffiti ordinance, Marini said. He’d like to change that. He said he’d like to put together a law that would include penalties for possessing graffiti tools within a certain radius of public facilities. 

That’s important to put on the books,” he said.

He said he hopes to have something drafted in the next six months.

It’s much more than just writing on the wall,” Marini said. The presence of unchecked graffiti creates an atmosphere in which crime is seen as permissible, he said. It’s almost an implicit authorization.”

Why Lennon?’

PHOTO: Thomas MacMillanPeople in the neighborhood last week seemed indifferent about the graffiti. 

That’s been there for a long time,” Margarida Jackson said about the Why Lennon?” piece. It don’t bother me.”

Informed of Marini’s plans to clean up graffiti, Jackson said, That’d be nice. … I wouldn’t mind it.”

Felicia Lee, who lives in the Riverside Apartments across the river, appeared a little later. She was rushing on her way to work.

About the Why Lennon?” graffiti, she said, We pays it no mind.”

She said installing lights would probably cut down on the graffiti.

Readers who responded to a question on the Valley Indy Facebook page, however, felt strongly: 

LEAVE IT ALONE,” wrote reader Kim Giannone. Growing up in Ansonia, I remember seeing it as a small child. Whenever it fades, someone used to darken it. John Lennon was one of THE BEST REAL musicians and icons to EVER live on this earth. Let that so-called graffiti serve as a remembrance. Have some respect for Lennon.”

Reader Darlene Bomba Zawisza said the graffiti stands as a message of peace. 

Years ago when someone painted over it, it was upsetting. Why Lennon? His message of Give peace a chance” is needed more now than ever,” Zawisza wrote. That is one piece of artwork’ that I do not look at as graffiti. It should stay there forever!”

Others said the graffiti should finally come down.

It is vandalism and while I respect the historical value of the vandalism I still feel that it is simply time for the town to move forward and clean it up,” wrote reader Isaias Diaz. 

Asked if he thought the longstanding Why Lennon?” graffiti had become a part of Ansonia history, Marini said he didn’t think so. 

It this a landmark we want to conserve? No.”

Plan now. Give later. Impact tomorrow. Learn more at ValleyGivesBack.org.