The Public Safety Survey being conducted by Seattle University is still underway but wraps up November 30. The sponsors are urging the public to take the survey.
As of Today (11/12) they have received the following number of surveys by neighborhood in the SW Precinct:
Alaska Junction: 68
Alki: 51
Fauntleroy: 39
Highland Park: 36
High Point: 22
Morgan: 35
North Admiral: 42
North Delridge: 15
Pigeon Point: 7
Roxhill/Westwood/Arbor Heights: 40
South Delridge: 23
South Park: 8
Please make sure your voice is heard by completing the public safety survey today.
Seattle University is administering the 10th annual citywide Seattle Public Safety Survey, which is accessible at publicsafetysurvey.org from October 15ththrough November 30th and is available in Amharic, Arabic, Chinese, English, Korean, Oromo, Somali, Spanish, Tagalog, Tigrinya and Vietnamese. The purpose of the survey is to solicit feedback on public safety and security concerns from those who live and/or work in Seattle. A report on the survey results will be provided to the Seattle Police Department to help them better understand your neighborhood’s safety and security concerns and community-police dialogues will be held in May-August 2025 to provide opportunity for police-community engagement about the results. More information on the Seattle Public Safety Survey which is part of the Seattle Police Department’s Micro-Community Policing Plans (SPD MCPP), can be found on the SPD MCPP website.
Please circulate this email to your friends, family, co-workers and community members and feel free to post the information on your social media. Flyers advertising the survey are attached, which we encourage you to also share, print, and post at your work, religious institution, community center, apartment, or other communal location. Here is a link to access the 2024 Seattle Public Safety Survey flyers in all 11 languages.
If you would like to work with a Seattle University researcher to setup outreach and assist in the facilitation of the survey to your communities or organizations, or you would like more information about the survey, please do not hesitate to contact the SPD MCPP research team by replying all to this email.
Public safety and security are community concerns. Please make sure your voice is heard by completing the Seattle Public Safety Survey today.