Published in the Daily Gleaner June 16 2017
http://beta.jamaica-gleaner.com/article/letters/20170616/disorder-fuelling-crime
THE EDITOR, Sir:
Once upon a time, The Organisation was losing millions of dollars per  year in inventory variances. The main warehouse was a mess. Antiquated  processes, haphazard putaway systems, zero accountability with  receivals, and poor management making collusion too easy were the status  quo.
 With obscured visibility, both literally (goods were placed randomly  and without order within the warehouse) and because of the inaccurate  data on the system, thieves had a field day. They deep-dived under the  chaos and enriched themselves.
 Then one day, we planned and executed an operational turnaround. An  automated warehouse management system was instituted and warehouses were  racked and binned. New ways of operating led to visibility and  accountability. Inventory variances all but disappeared. With the  imposition of order, lawlessness had no context in which to flourish.
 What if Kingston were clean? What if litterbugs were prosecuted?
 What if the horrible, brutish taxi drivers who create third lanes were prosecuted under the law?
 What if traffic violations, regardless of perpetrator, were always prosecuted?
 What if schools partnered with the police force and the Transport  Authority to get our children awaiting buses in the HWT Transport Centre  to comport themselves with dignity and decorum?
 What if justice was equally swift, regardless of brown or black skin, or address?
 What if the flow of raw sewage below Torrington Bridge was dealt with as quickly as if it were flowing in Kingston 8?
 Would the crime statistics in Jamaica change?
 KELLY MCINTOSH
 kkmac218@gmail.com
