“This is very related on the spectrum, because basically, no matter what homelessness shows up on the street, we all know that the underlying root cause is lack of shelter, period,” said Mayor Tim Keeler. The mayor responded by closing the 60-year-old Albuquerque restaurant. Griff’s Hamburgers announced the closure late last night, citing crime and homelessness as a major factor. People sleeping on the street is a familiar sight. Ivy Paint and Body owner Doug Inkster said, “Most of the time, I have to kick them out in the morning.” Every day the crowd returns, which is one of the reasons why its next door neighbors suddenly closed their doors. “We’ve had to stay in the car even after the pandemic because of, you know, everything that’s going on here. The lights are piling up across the street,” said Jamie Holland, Greif’s regional manager. “I saw them from the car window. Some homeless people would walk up to customers windows and start confronting them and I saw arguments and people getting out of their cars. Inkster said. The Albuquerque map shows all the incidents that have occurred in that area, the latest being the shooting last Friday. “Despite the neighborhood, the conditions, the homeless, everything that’s going on here, the Mother’s Day shooting that happened right next door to us is the final straw,” Holland said. Kott asked the mayor what could be done to solve the problem. Keller said, “So what you’ll see is we’re going to continue to move forward on this issue. And now we’ve got cleanup crews through the quarter that’s kind of becoming realistic around April. But that’s going to stay.” Meanwhile, Griff’s hopes to establish a new restaurant in the future. “In the future, it’s probably been a possibility. We could go back. I just don’t know exactly when that will be,” Holland said. Griff’s will continue to operate restaurants in Texas and Louisiana.
“This is very related on the spectrum, because basically, no matter what homelessness shows up on the street, we all know that the underlying root cause is lack of shelter, period,” said Mayor Tim Keeler.
The mayor responded by closing the 60-year-old Albuquerque restaurant.
Griff’s Hamburgers announced the closure late last night, citing crime and homelessness as a major factor.
People sleeping on the street is a familiar sight. Ivy Paint and Body owner Doug Inkster said, “Most of the time, I have to kick them out in the morning.”
Every day the crowd returns, which is one of the reasons why its next door neighbors suddenly closed their doors.
“We’ve had to stay in the drive-thru even after the pandemic because of, you know, everything that’s going on here. The lights are piling up across the street,” said Jamie Holland, Greif’s regional manager.
“I saw them from the car window. Some homeless people were going up to customers’ windows and starting to confront them and I saw arguments and people getting out of their cars,” Inkster said.
The Albuquerque map shows all the incidents that have occurred in that area, the latest being the shooting last Friday.
“Despite the neighborhood, the conditions, the homeless, everything that’s going on here, the Mother’s Day shooting that happened right next door to us is the final straw,” Holland said.
Kott asked the mayor what could be done to solve the problem.
Keller said, “So what you’ll see is we’re going to continue to move forward on this issue. And now we’ve got cleanup crews through the quarter that’s kind of becoming realistic around April. But that’s going to stay.”
Meanwhile, Griff’s hopes to establish a new restaurant in the future.
“In the future, maybe it was a possibility. We can go back. I just don’t know exactly when that will be,” Holland said.
Griff’s will continue to operate restaurants in Texas and Louisiana.
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