Ballantyne’s take on Uptown safety: what matters now

Ballantyne, Uptown, and the gap between stats and vibes

Here’s the short version: CMPD says Charlotte crime is down through September, including a 20 percent drop in violent crime and a 24 percent drop in homicides. Yet Uptown still feels tense to a lot of people, and those viral clips are doing plenty of emotional heavy lifting. If you want the receipts and the full context, read the Mercury’s report, Charlotte crime down, Uptown concern up.

We read it so you don’t have to, then decided you should read it anyway. The piece walks through the numbers, the late-night strategy in the entertainment district, and the uncomfortable truth that confidence takes longer to recover than a quarterly chart. It is not doom and it is not a victory lap. It is useful.

Bottom line for Ballantyne: the city can make progress and still have specific blocks feel off. Those two things can be true at once.


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What the Mercury found

  • The numbers: Overall crime down 8 percent, violent crime down 20 percent, homicides down 24 percent with an 80 percent clearance rate. Property crime is down 5 percent.
  • The friction: Uptown is a small footprint with big visibility. A few high-profile incidents can warp citywide perception.
  • The pivot: CMPD’s Entertainment District Unit and the Crown Initiative focus on peak-hour visibility, venue accountability, and quality-of-life enforcement, while routing folks in need toward services.
  • The ask: Register your cameras with Connect Charlotte, lock your car, and report tips. Simple steps still matter.

For the full breakdown and a sensible “what to watch next,” head to the Mercury’s coverage: Charlotte crime down, Uptown concern up.


What this means if you live, eat, or dance in Ballantyne

  • Yes, the city can get safer while you still feel jumpy. Feelings are not wrong, they are data.
  • Choose crowded, well-lit spots late at night. That includes parking. Walk with a friend.
  • Take the two easy wins: remove firearms from vehicles and hide valuables.
  • Be a good neighbor with receipts: share footage with detectives when asked, and register cameras.

Want the precise context to send your HOA group chat. Share the Mercury link: Charlotte crime down, Uptown concern up.


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Got a tip, a new shop, or a golden retriever with a bow tie? Please email us at ballantyne@strollmag.com. Everyone has a story worth sharing.

Our sister newsroom, The Charlotte Mercury, is doing the slow work on public safety without the drama or the tracking pixels. You can roam News, live in Politics, and obsess responsibly over “Poll Dance 2025,” the Mercury’s always-updated election hub. Strolling Ballantyne is part of The Mercury, which means you get neighborhood flavor here and deep dives there. We like it that way.

If you only do three things this week

  1. Read the analysis: Charlotte crime down, Uptown concern up.
  2. Add the Crime Stoppers number to your phone and talk to your teen about basic safety habits.
  3. Walk one block more with a neighbor. Street life is a safety feature.

About the Author

Nell Thomas writes with a laptop in one hand and a bagel in the other. Fuel of choice is Einstein Bros’ Ballantyne cold brew with an everything bagel, toasted, cream cheese on one half and butter on the other, because balance. If you see her, she is probably debating whether a bacon, egg, and cheddar on asiago counts as “research.” Nell reports for The Charlotte Mercury and strolls for Strolling Ballantyne, where the caffeine is strong and the neighborhood gossip is kinder than Twitter.

What else is on our site? Start at Strolling Ballantyne. Read our About Us section, skim the Privacy Policy, find a human via Contact Us, and, if you’re still awake, there is always the Terms of Service. Then go outside. Take a picture. Email it to ballantyne@strollmag.com. We will brag on your dog.


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Creative Commons License

© 2025 Strolling Ballantyne / The Charlotte Mercury
This article, “Ballantyne’s take on Uptown safety: what matters now,” by Nell Thomas is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

“Ballantyne’s take on Uptown safety: what matters now”
by Nell Thomas, Strolling Ballantyne (CC BY-ND 4.0)