In places like Michigan Avenue and Millennium Park, Chicago police confirm they've already deployed extra resources.
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"It will help. Things have gotten out of hand in the Loop in the last couple of weekends," 2nd Ward Alderman Brian Hopkins said. "There's been far more shootings than people should ever expect to see in the downtown area."
The quiet of the Loop during business hours does not bode well for Chicago staple Syd Jerome Menswear. Its owner said people are afraid of coming downtown, and given pandemic-related changes to workflows and little police presence here, the future is gloomy.
RELATED: Chicago mayor tries to reassure people following violent weekend downtown: 'They are safe'
"There is no comfort coming from leadership that would want me to come back downtown," said Scott Shapiro, owner of Syd Jerome Menswear. "In fact, I'm getting a little tired of being an ambassador for the city of Chicago."
In the wake of another disturbance overnight, Shapiro, whose store has been robbed three times including, is demanding more police.
"You know, we are hard-working people. We are the same as people who are working in the neighborhoods," Shapiro said.
A brawl in River North early Wednesday morning near the Hard Rock Cafe sparked a big response from CPD and Cook County Sheriff's deputies.
The large fight was yet another example of disturbances in the downtown area.
A man also said he was robbed at knifepoint at the CTA station at State Street and Roosevelt Road early Wednesday.
The overnight violence comes on the heels of several shootings in the downtown area in the past several days that had the police superintendent promising to deploy more officers by this weekend.
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"We're starting to see shootings and homicides in areas that we don't see in the city, to include our downtown and other neighborhoods, particularly the 9th District," CPD Superintendent David Brown said.
Just last week, Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart opened a command post in River North. For days now, sheriff's deputies have been acting as a force multiplier to help CPD focus on getting the downtown area under control.
Although, CPD is not confirming the number of additional officers being deployed.
Hopkins, whose ward includes part of the downtown area, said CPD doesn't plan on sharing those numbers with him or the public.
"I understand why they're reluctant because we don't have enough police in Chicago right now, so every time one area gets more police, it's coming at the expense of another area that also has a justified need for it, so there's a competitive factor at play here," he said.
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But Hopkins is grateful for the resources now in place, especially as the weather is about to get warmer next week.
"We need to have a show of force, we need to have a visible deterrent and we need to have police that are there ready to make arrests when people start breaking the law," he said.
ABC7 asked the mayor's office and its new Community Safety Coordination Center for more on how the city is tackling crime going forward but officials declined to be interviewed.
"All I can do as a merchant is call out the leadership and say, 'Look, we need your help,'" Shapiro said.
Chicago police will only say additional resources will be deployed beginning Wednesday night to supplement district resources already in place downtown.
Some of the officers will be part of teams that are mobile. They can quickly be re-deployed as a situation develops and make arrests.
The police superintendent said he hopes to keep the extra patrols in place through Labor Day if not beyond.