Seattle University researchers are seeking public input for the 10th annual Seattle Public Safety Survey.
The survey asks people who live or work in Seattle to go to publicsafetysurvey.org and share their perceptions of crime and safety citywide and within their own neighborhoods.
The survey will be open until Nov. 30. It is available in Amharic, Arabic, Chinese, English, Korean, Oromo, Somali, Spanish, Tagalog, Tigrinya and Vietnamese.
Seattle University’s Department of Criminal Justice, Criminology and Forensics leads the data collection and analysis, which is then provided to Seattle’s police department.
“No neighborhood in Seattle is alike when it comes to crime and public safety,” said Dr. Jacqueline Helfgott, director of the school's Crime & Justice Research Center in a press release. “Data from the annual Seattle Public Safety Survey provides important information for the city to help the Seattle Police Department and the community work together to identify priorities and strategies to improve quality of life in Seattle neighborhoods.”
Last year’s survey found people’s top five public safety concerns were traffic safety, police capacity, property crime, homelessness and community capacity. Concerns about “community capacity” include issues with wait times to speak to emergency dispatchers, insufficient resources for people experiencing public mental health crises and a lack of block watches.