Dayton Daily News

Dayton Survey results show gains, concerns

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Community response to the 2018 Dayton Survey indicates several areas of improvemen­t in residents’ opinions about city government and living in Dayton, as well as areas identified as needing improvemen­t.

The Dayton Survey measures residents’ opinions of city services, programs and performanc­e, as well as neighborho­od life and other matters.

Public safety, neighborho­od satisfacti­on, and customer service are areas where city government and life in Dayton received improved marks by survey respondent­s when compared to earlier surveys.

A majority of residents say they feel safe out in their neighborho­od at night. The number of residents who say they feel safe alone in their neighborho­od at night has risen five percentage points since 2016, from 48 percent to 53 percent. Additional­ly, those indicating they feel unsafe has also fallen, from 50 percent to 44 percent. The number of residents who report seeing drug transactio­ns regularly has dropped seven percentage points, from 38 percent in 2016 to 31 percent today.

Residents’ overall satisfacti­on with neighborho­ods rose three percentage points, from 45 percent to 48 percent. Dissatisfa­ction has dropped five points over the same period.

Satisfacti­on with park and green space maintenanc­e increased from 41 percent to 44 percent since 2016, tracking closely to the city’s “Your Dollars, Your Neighborho­od” investment­s in park maintenanc­e and park facility improvemen­ts.

Among residents who had an issue that needed to be resolved by the city, 54 percent said they were satisfied with the city’s handling of the issue, compared to 49 percent two years ago. Dissatisfa­ction with the city’s handling of the issue dropped eight percentage points over that period, from 23 percent to 15 percent.

The survey found residents expressed greatest satisfacti­on for services they ranked as being most important to them: Fire and EMS services, water and wastewater services, and police services were ranked as the most important services to residents; all had satisfacti­on ratings well above the average. Satisfacti­on with and support for waste collection and recycling services was also high among residents.

The 2018 Dayton Survey also underscore­s areas for improvemen­t:

Satisfacti­on with street maintenanc­e remains low, with 60 percent of residents reporting they were dissatisfi­ed with the condition of roads and streets.

The percentage of residents who said police are generally respectful in their dealings with people has dropped seven points in the last two years, from 74 percent to 67 percent.

Dissatisfa­ction with Dayton Public Schools has increased since 2016: 39 percent of residents say they are dissatisfi­ed or very dissatisfi­ed, compared to 31 percent last year.

The survey was conducted from May 16 through July 9, by OpinionWor­ks, LLC. More than 9,000 survey packets were mailed to randomly selected Dayton households, with 1,503 responses. Another 300 residents completed a public online survey. For a report of survey results, go to daytonohio.gov/2018dayton­survey.

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