Roll Call Complaints provide a means for informing patrol officers of chronic neighborhood problems or conditions that are not of an emergency nature. This initiative is designed to be an effective, proactive response to neighborhood concerns.Click here for the form.
For instance, Roll Call Complaints are frequently used to report groups of disorderly teens that routinely congregate on local street corners. Likewise, this mechanism has been successfully used to inform the police department of special community events so that officers can provide additional security. Basically, any non-emergency problem or condition that the police patrol force should be made aware of can be reported using the Roll Call Complaint protocol.
Once we receive the report, it is posted on a complaint board that is routinely read to officers during six daily roll calls. These announcements continue for a minimum of fifteen calendar days. The information reported in the complaint is recorded by the individual officers in their patrol notebooks and are responded to by patrol officers between calls for service.
Following the initial fifteen day announcement and response period, the complainant may be contacted and a follow-up review initiated. If, following this review, the complaint has been definitively resolved, the case is considered closed. If, however, the problem or condition still requires police attention, the complaint will be reinstituted for an additional fifteen days and may be the subject of additional, specifically tailored problem-solving measures aimed at satisfying the need for final resolution of the problem.
Please include as much information as you can in the form provided. Incomplete or inaccurate information will delay processing of this report and may compromise our ability to quickly and effectively respond.
Please note that you may remain anonymous, however, if you choose to do so we will be hampered in our ability to elicit additional information from you that might aid us in attaining a long-term solution to this problem. Consequently, your anonymity may compromise the efficacy of our efforts to resolve the problem in a satisfactory manner.
If you elect to provide us with your identity, we will treat it as confidential information and will not disclose it outside this agency except as required and permitted by law.
About Us:
The mission of the Hunting Park Civic Association is for neighbors to be united in caring for the well-being of our community.
We are a group comprised of neighbors, block captains, elected officials, clergy, and police who meet on the 2nd Tuesday of each month at 6:30pm at Spirit and Truth Fellowship, 4400 N. 6th St. Everyone is invited. Whoever comes is the right people!
We are a group comprised of neighbors, block captains, elected officials, clergy, and police who meet on the 2nd Tuesday of each month at 6:30pm at Spirit and Truth Fellowship, 4400 N. 6th St. Everyone is invited. Whoever comes is the right people!
Monday, June 23, 2008
How to submit a rollcall complaint at the 25th District Police Station
From the Philadelphia Police Department website:
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
How Much Value Does the City of Philadelphia Receive from its Park and Recreation System?
The Philadelphia Parks Alliance released their report on the benefits of our park system this week. The Hunting Park Civic Association spent several minutes on this very issue in last night's monthly meeting. Our park has become a black eye on our neighborhood, but its potential is tremendous.
From the Alliance report:
From the Alliance report:
Just imagine…Click here to read and imagine.
In their present state, the city’s parks generate $18 million in added property tax revenue and $689 million in increased equity for homeowners near parks. Improved parks could triple those numbers.
Imagine:
Philadelphia’s parks already bring in $40 million in tourist revenue. Picture how they might perform when fully equipped with functioning restrooms, water fountains, restored historic homes, repaired picnic tables and upgraded trails.
Imagine:
Philadelphians already save $70 million in medical expenses by using parks. That number would rise if the city’s parks were cleaner, safer, and stocked with amenities like bikes to rent and water ice to slurp.
Imagine:
Our more than 9,200 acres of parks, woods, riverbeds and open space already provide at least $7 million worth of storm water and air pollution control each year. Every new tree fights asthma. Every new trail fights obesity. Every cleared streambed dries out a basement and unclogs a storm drain.
Imagine all this, and then imagine doing nothing. To us it is unimaginable.
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