Public Safety Discussion Group Two at Klein JCC
A City That Works - May 9, 2008
Report by Moderator Harris Sokoloff
What does this goal mean to you?
• Feel secure.
• Able to go out in the evening.
• Trees are cut for safety.
• Be able to open windows at night and not fear someone will come in to steal from me.
• Only people who can read English get licenses.
• Few absentee landlords.
• Feel safe taking regional train and the El at night.
• Eliminate the homicide rate.
• Clear contact in city hall for fire prevention.
• Criminals (particularly felons) spend full time in jail.
• More businesses come into the city, more jobs means less crimes.
• Feel safe in parking lots.
• Get rid of illegal drug sales.
Performance measures (What would success look like?):
• Safe schools:
→ Increase the percentage of children in after school programs by 10% or more each year.
→ Reduce gangs.
→ Reduce truancy by 20 percent each year.
• Increase parent responsibility.
• Police walking the beat know what’s going on – they are visible and know us.
• Police patrol shopping center parking lots – in cars and walking around and talking to citizens.
• Police talk with children regularly in schools:
→ Get to know the children personally.
→ So children learn to know and respect police.
• Violent criminals spend full terms in jail.
• Support the “Guardian Angels” – subsidizing their fares on SEPTA:
→ See how this is done in other cities
• More control on absentee landlords to reduce low income/irresponsible renters.
• Police are visible on subways and busses.
• Reduce the number of abandoned houses by X percent a year.
Customer-service standards:
•Respond to 911 calls within 9 minutes (same for all calls –health, burglary, etc.).
• Competent response of phone when you call 911:
→ Indicate they understand my question/complaint/plea:
→ Treat me with respect.
→ Don’t put me on hold.
• City offices call me back to tell me how my problem is being addressed/fixed.
• 311:
→ answer my question.
→ respond quickly.
→ get me to the right person with only one call.



