Letter: Why does Burien CARES seems to have significantly more service calls than the rest of King County?
Tue, 04/02/2013
At the Burien Council City study session on March 25, 2013, the city staff gave a report on the animal care and animal control non profit (CARES) that the city pays for, $120,000 per year-see the city packet of the meeting.
The city staff presentation packet seemed to skip a number of the points that should have been of concern to the city such as; currently animals that have bitten or acted aggressively to humans and domestic animals are being adopted to the public. This creates a huge liability on the placement agency and the contracting city for lawsuits. Also, if something happens to the animal control officer or the owner/director of CARES there is no one else available to take over the job and/or provide sufficient funding to keep CARES providing services to Burien.
Debi Wagner pretty well summarized many of the issues on CARES needing correction in her letter. -See
http://www.highlinetimes.com/2013/03/25/news/letter-audit-shows-burien-…
What was even more interesting were the peculiar statistics that the city staff showed on the screen that were not included in the packet. It seems that the cost to belong to the King County Animal Control Program (RASKC) is based on the number of service calls that happen in one year.
Burien has such a peculiarly high number of service calls that it raises the question as to whether this number is correct or inflated to keep the Burien City Council from considering returning to King County for its services?
In Burien, CARES seems to have significantly more service calls then the rest of King County (the 48,073 people in Burien made 2,860 service calls to Cares in 2012, while the 1,041,395 people in King County made 5,392 calls to the King County animal control in 2012). Something seems very strange about these numbers and the effectiveness of CARES. So let's look at the stats-
Service Calls x1000 = Service Calls / 1000 People
Population Served
CARES 2860 x 1000 = 59.5 Calls / 1000
48,073
RASKC 5392 x 1000 = 5.2 Calls / 1000
1,041,395
59.5 = 11.5
5.2
Burien has 11.5 times more service calls then the rest of King County per 1000 population. This brings up obvious questions like:
1) How does this compare to before when RASKC was Burien’s animal control?
2) Why is Burien’s service call rate so high and King County’s so low?
3) Is CARES correctly counting its service calls?
4) Is CARES using the same definition for service calls as the rest of the county?
5) Is the lack of training of the CARES staff (as noted by the evaluation author/Denise McVicker) causing an increased rate in service calls?
6) Does it take CARES so long to respond to the initial call for service that it causes citizens to make extra calls about the same animal?
7) Is the uncoordinated dead animal pick up policy (noted by the evaluator) resulting in added service calls?
8) Is the lack of a clear cat policy by CARES (noted by the evaluator) causing confusion for citizens and resulting in extra service calls? CARES does not serve cats and King County does. CARES is really only a dog animal care and dog animal control.
Assuming that a service call is defined as a citizen who is reporting an animal that needs to be picked up for whatever reason, what is the success rate?
Animal Intake = Success Rate
Service Calls
CARES 304 = 10.6%
2860
RASKC 4754 = 88.2%
5392
88.2% = 8.3
10.6%
RASKC is 8.3 times more likely to get/put up the animal per call.
The Burien City staff and the City Council have an obligation to present clear data and an honest analysis of this data to the citizens for a service the citizens are paying for. The cost savings that the City Manager/Mike Martin was boasting about at the City Council Meeting may not be as great as he claimed when the data is thoroughly analyzed.
Burien citizens and the Council should have the right to get a true comparison of what they are getting from CARES as well as what their tax payer dollars might be able to purchase from King County Animal Control (RASKC).
Why does the City Manager constantly resist having someone from RASKC come and make a presentation to the City Council and the public about what services RASKC could provide and the cost? Call or email the Council with your concerns. City Council Burien
R. DeLorm
Burien