Omaha’s ‘No Cruising’ signs: A rarely enforced relic of a teenage pastime
By Jeremy Turley, Flatwater Free Press
April 12, 2024, 10 a.m. ·

For teenagers of the 1980s, Omaha offered little to do on warm summer nights.
Too old to hang with their parents and too young for the bars, scores of teens hopped in their cars and headed for Dodge Street to cruise the main stretch from 69th to 90th Streets.
Each crew had a “home base” along the arterial road. Dawn Slama Seefus’ hung out in front of Jiffy Lube.
“Dodge Street was like a recurring party that you could show up at and feel like you never left,” Slama Seefus said.
In 1992, the party came to an abrupt end.
Citing an uptick in car crashes, traffic jams and teenage tomfoolery, the Omaha City Council banned cruising on Dodge. Local leaders across the country had taken similar steps to clamp down on the pastime in the previous decade.
The city mounted “No Cruising” signs along a busy 2.3-mile section of the road.
Nighttime drivers caught passing by a Dodge Street traffic control point three times within a two-hour period risked losing driving privileges for a month.
The law appeared to work as Dodge’s cruising scene quickly shriveled.
City officials later extended the cruising ban to several spots around midtown and downtown as part of a push to stifle seedier illegal activity.
The “no cruising” ordinance remains on the books today, though it’s hardly ever enforced. Omaha police haven’t issued a single citation for cruising in more than a decade.
“I can’t necessarily say it’s not an issue. It’s just not as prevalent … as it used to be when this (law) was first enacted,” said OPD spokesman Neal Bonacci.
Only a few black-lettered “No Cruising” signs still hang in Omaha, and their numbers are dwindling. When the remaining signs are eventually removed due to age, the city doesn’t plan to replace them.

The day that cruising died
Omaha’s cruising tradition dates back to at least the late 1950s. Local lawyer Katie Dunn recently learned that her mother was among the teens who drove along Dodge in those days while scoping out parking spots at Tiner’s Drive-In.
Cruising Dodge allowed teens “to see and be seen” without chaperones, Dunn wrote last year in Omaha Magazine. It was a way to feel grown up without having to act like an adult, she said.
Dunn didn’t cruise much herself, but her younger brother Jeff and his mom’s silver Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme were fixtures of the scene.
The west Omaha native remembers driving to bars downtown and “being horrified” to see Jeff still cruising Dodge on the way back from her night out.
Momentum to ban cruising on Dodge started building in the early 1990s.
Police said cruising caused traffic issues and general unruliness, then-Mayor P.J. Morgan recalled. Retailers on the strip found the nighttime presence of partying teenagers to be a nuisance, he said.
When Councilman Lee Terry proposed a Dodge cruising ban in 1992, more than three dozen impassioned residents testified on the proposal.
Among the letter writers in support of the ordinance were Tom and Jeri Tinsley, whose 18-year-old son Robert had been stabbed to death by another young man during a night of cruising in 1981.
“It is our heartfelt hope that no other family will have to cope with this kind of devastation,” the Tinsleys wrote.
A trio of Westside High School students opposed Terry’s effort, writing that the law would be “prejudiced against the many teenagers of Omaha.”
The deciding input, however, came in the form of a report by a city traffic engineer. Prime cruising hours on weekends produced a noticeable uptick in car accidents along Dodge, and a full two-thirds of the crashes involved drivers between 16 and 21, the report stated.
The council passed the anti-cruising ordinance on March 24, 1992, and Morgan signed it into law two days later.
The ban worked almost immediately.
Some diehard cruisers migrated on summer nights to Council Bluffs’ Broadway strip, but the Iowa city outlawed the activity in 1994 amid growing complaints.
In 2000, Omaha council members created new no-cruising zones along Leavenworth Street and Park Avenue in midtown to clamp down on sex work and drug dealing in the area, the Omaha World-Herald reported.
"Hookers and drug dealers … that's a real big problem down there,” said former Councilman Bob Sivick at the time.
Revitalization of the area over the past decade has mostly erased its reputation as a hotbed of prostitution, said Bonacci, the police spokesman.
OPD has not cited anyone for cruising since 2013 when officers pulled over a man driving a blue Chevy Malibu near Hanscom Park.
The department only has record of issuing 10 cruising citations since 2001, and none of them came on Dodge Street, according to records obtained by the Flatwater Free Press.
OPD never made a conscious decision to stop enforcing the anti-cruising law, Bonacci said, noting that officers still occasionally cite young drivers for related offenses like “exhibition of speed” – more commonly known as street racing.
The ordinance could potentially be useful to police if cruising catches on again, he said.
As a mother of six, Dunn doesn't expect the cops will have to worry about that.
Today’s teens have TikTok and Instagram to keep them entertained and wouldn’t see much point in driving aimlessly down busy roads, she said.
Cruising Dodge proved to be more than just a pastime for Slama Seefus. She made lifelong friends and even met her first husband there. The former Omaha cruiser administers a local Facebook group where old pals reconnect and reminisce about their rowdy nights on Dodge Street.
Now a grandmother, Slama Seefus doesn’t want to see a cruising revival on Dodge – times have changed, and it just wouldn’t be the same. But the memories are only a daydream away.
“Sometimes, when I have a little extra time, and I'm driving down Dodge, I pull into a parking lot and just sit there with my eyes closed,” she said.
“I can feel the setting sun on my face, I can feel the cool breeze stirring up the night air, I hear the echoes of my friends calling my name, and I swear that I can hear Bon Jovi singing ‘Never Say Goodbye.’”
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