Baltimore Police Commissioner Michael Harrison detailed a plan he has to address recent violence in the city on Tuesday.

As of Tuesday, Baltimore has marked 152 homicides so far this year. Harrison said he wants to focus on microzones.

Harrison addressed the city's homicide rate, saying it is higher now than it was at the same time last year. He also described how officers will be required to spend more time in specific zones while on patrol.

"It's sad. It's really sad. And I hate to even think about it," said a woman who asked to not to be identified.

The woman lives just across the parking lot from the location of the latest Baltimore homicide. Police tape on the ground and on a fence near a playground indicate the area next to a picnic table where Raymond Johnson, 44, was found unresponsive Monday night in the 200 block of Douglass Court.

Hours earlier, another man was shot in 2300 block of North Fulton Avenue. The victim died after being shot multiple times. So far this year, there have been 152 homicides in Baltimore as compared to 133 last year.

"It's said you sitting around, see so much going on, you know? And it's right up on you and you don’t know it," the woman said.

Searching for innovative ways of reducing crime, Baltimore City police are rolling out what they call "place-based policing," a new strategy targeting specific locations known as "microzones."

Harrison said the zones are two blocks long and two blocks wide. Officers will be required to spend up to 20 minutes, three times per shift, doing enforcement and talking to people in the community. They are trying to put more officers in areas where historically much of the violent crime has occurred.

Engaging more in the community to help solve crimes result in a better pulse on the zones and being more proactive. Police do say the new strategy is similar to others tried in the past like hot spots. The difference is more community engagement and checks on businesses.

"Now officer are very often in the right places and right time, but violent crimes are being committed anyway, which speaks to a certain culture of violence where criminals do not fear any possible consequences from the criminal justice system," Harrison said. "So in our opinion, that culture of violence simply has to change."