Have you ever driven down the street past a burst water main and wondered who to call to report it — or even if it was worth bothering to call anyone? Or been stopped at a stop light while another driver makes a rolling right turn on red into oncoming traffic — yet the police car on the other side of the intersection seems to ignore the violation and drives off in the other direction? And that seemingly abandoned car on the side street near your home — how long does it have to sit there before someone comes and tows it away?

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          Then this story is for you. In fact, it’s for everyone who ever wanted to find out how to answer those questions, as well as the countless others that come up in the course of living in Dallas, whether it’s deciphering the bulky trash pickup schedule, determining how to get the city to put a speed bump on your street, or wondering if the fire department still rescues cats stuck in trees.

 

 

 

So many of us are so preoccupied with fighting City Hall or complaining about City Hall that we may lose sight of figuring out how City Hall works so that we can actually get something done. We bellyache all the time about paying taxes, but how many of us actually know how to get the city to give us our money’s worth?

 

 

 

In other words, we offer you a Dummy’s Guide to Dallas city government.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dialing for dollars

 

 

 

          There are three ways to contact the city if you have a question about services, such as getting those potholes fixed. You can call your city council member, you can call the department directly (in this case, street services), or you can call 311, the non-emergency number set up expressly for that purpose. It’s the latter that city officials insist is the best, quickest and most effective option. Really.

 

 

 

          They aren’t alone in this confidence, either. Since the $5 million system was upgraded three years ago, it has been one of the most respected of the two dozen or so 311 systems in the country (as difficult as that may be to believe). Big-time computer experts have called it revolutionary. Other cities have studied it in planning their own 311 projects, including New York and Los Angeles .

 

 

 

What makes it so earth shattering? City officials say Dallas 311 automatically routes requests to the appropriate department and then tracks the requests to ensure that service-level agreements are met, and it does this for more than 1 million calls a year covering 650 categories from bulky trash pickup schedules to garage sale guidelines to the no-smoking ordinance, and it does it for 24 hours, 365 days a year. In this, it operates much like the customer service call centers used by businesses such as Lands End or Dell (even uses the same kind of software). Best yet, the operators are live and there are no confusing punch-this-button menus to wade through. (Although, for some reason, 311 is run by the fire department.)

 

 

 

For instance, if you call to report a pothole, the 311 operator punches the keyboard and gets a form on the computer screen designed by the streets department to gather information so they can fix the pothole. It includes size — 3 feet by 3 feet is a routine pothole, which differs from an emergency pothole — location, and contact information. It also often includes response time, which in the case of a non-emergency pot hole is 24 days. You can file a request or see what the operators see by clicking though the city’s 311 Web site at http://311.dallascityhall.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

What’s the catch?

 

 

 

Ah, you say. That’s it — 24 days to fix a pothole. But at least they’re honest about it. (And if you’re unhappy about response times, then it’s time to call your council member.) Otherwise:

 

 

 

• Have a problem with a wandering dog? 311 forwards your call to animal control, which will respond in one day for an aggressive animal, 45 days otherwise.

 

 

 

• Is your neighbor parking several cars in his yard? The call is forwarded to code compliance, which will investigate the complaint within 10 working days.

 

 

 

• Did the garbage truck zoom by without stopping? 311 forwards the call to sanitation, which will make an effort to pick it up if you call before noon that day. Otherwise, you have to wait until the next scheduled pickup.

 

 

 

But what about service requests (or SRs, as the city likes to call them) that don’t involve immediate action? It turns out that the most common 311 request is the phone number for the city jail, so operators are trained to be flexible. That means that if you want find out how to get that speed bump or a stop light for your corner, you should still call 311. The operator will take the necessary information, explain the process to you — there has to be neighborhood agreement in favor of the project as well as a traffic study to see if it’s necessary and money to pay for it — and either forward the request to the correct department or tell you how to make it to the appropriate department. The turnaround time, by the way, is about three months.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Walking the beat

 

 

 

          Turnaround time is more critical at the Dallas Police Department. The cops use a four-tier priority system, where the goal is to respond to the highest priority — shootings, cuttings and holdups — within minutes. From there, response times decline to a bit longer for the second tier (domestic disputes), to quite a bit longer for the third tier (loud music, barking dogs) to the next day for the fourth tier, which includes crimes, such as car break-ins, where the criminal is long gone.

 

 

 

          Response times matter in another way. The police department is organized into six reporting areas (soon to be seven), or substations, based on geography. Most of North Dallas is part of the North Central substation, which is divided into three sectors, and each sector is divided into beats. The size of the beat is based on the amount of reported crime, with more crime translating into smaller beats, and hence quicker response times. The best view of this, along with current and historical crime statistics, is on the police Web site at dallaspolice.net.

 

 

 

The demands of the priority system help explain why you don’t see more cops walking the beat (even though officers are encouraged to get out of their patrol cars every once in a while) or making routine traffic stops. The reason? The officer has check with the dispatcher before walking the beat or making a traffic stop (or eating lunch, for that matter), so if there is a higher priority call waiting, the officer responds to that instead. So an illegal right on red always takes a back seat to a shooting.

 

 

 

          By the way, the police department (and the fire department) wants you to call 911, even if you’re not sure it’s an emergency. Better safe than sorry.

 

 

 

          Of course, not all police business is concerned with emergencies:

 

 

 

          • Want to set up a neighborhood crime watch or have an officer speak at your crime watch meeting? Call the Interactive Community Policing office at the North Central substation (214-670-7247). They’ll also inspect your home or business and offer crime prevention tips (on a first-come, first-served, time-available business). Incidentally, there are 1,400 crime watch programs in the city.

 

 

 

• The department offers three other crime watch-style programs, also coordinated by a community police officer at the substation. VIP (Volunteers in Patrol) participants patrol their neighborhoods — you get a nifty magnetic sign for the side of your car — and report suspicious or criminal activity via cell phone or radio. CHIPS (Citizens Helping in Parking Solutions) are trained to write tickets for cars illegally parked in handicapped spots — and only handicapped spots, emphasizes the department. At the Citizen’s Police Academy , residents can get a feel for real police training — including time on the firing range — in a three-hour-a-week, 10-week program that takes place at the police academy.

 

 

 

• Need to hire an off-duty officer for a private function? Contact the personnel department (214-761-4410), which posts all openings — everything from Texas-OU weekend to neighborhood block parties — through a department intranet. Jobs are filled on a first-come, first-served basis.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fire engine red

 

 

 

          Response time is also a key focus for Dallas Fire-Rescue (as the fire department is officially known). Typically, department officials say, 90 percent of calls to 911 are answered in eight minutes or less, and those that require an ambulance are answered in 4 to 5 minutes.

 

 

 

          The fire department has 55 stations throughout the city, four of which are in North Dallas — stations 7, 10, 13 and 56. Note that only 32 stations have ambulances, so the department prefers residents call 911 rather than drive the injured person to their local station (where even if there is an ambulance it might be out on a call). And yes, they say, that happens all too often.

 

 

 

Stations are located in accordance with population density, which explains why there are four downtown within a mile of each other and just one in some corners of the city. The complete list is on the department’s Web site at dallasfirerescue.com, which includes live summaries of which station is answering which call. There are also fire statistics, but they aren’t as comprehensive as those on the police Web site (although there are spiffy histories of each fire station). Station 7 on

Davenport Road

, for example, was originally in Oak Cliff. When a newer station opened in that area, the department moved the number to North Dallas and opened a new station in 1980.

 

, for example, was originally in Oak Cliff. When a newer station opened in that area, the department moved the number to North Dallas and opened a new station in 1980.

 

, for example, was originally in Oak Cliff. When a newer station opened in that area, the department moved the number to North Dallas and opened a new station in 1980.

 

And, like the police, the fire department provides a variety of non-emergency services:

 

 

 

          • Firefighters still respond to calls from little old ladies (or not so little young men, for that matter) about cats in trees. This has been department policy for about a century, although a couple of things have changed over the years. Trucks don’t race to the scene with sirens wailing, and it’s up to the individual fire fighter’s discretion about whether to climb up after the cat. After all, cats do like to scratch.

 

 

 

          • Need a fire fighter to speak to your group? Want to tour your local station? Contact the public education office at 214-670-4633. Again, it’s first-come, first-served.

 

 

 

          • Locked yourself out of your house? You can call 911 and they’ll send a fire truck, but it’s with the understanding that they aren’t locksmiths and they may have to break a window to let you in.