Call center
minute and 40 seconds, city data show.
That was a significant improvement from 2018, when the average wait time was almost 3 minutes. The finance call center answered more than 79,200 calls through the first three quarters of 2019.
Public works said in 2019 it answered 92% of calls in less than 1 minute, and only 7% of calls were abandoned.
Public works, however, did not meet its goal of answering 98% of calls within 1 minute and having an abandoned call rate of 2% or less, said Fred Stovall, Dayton’s director of public works.
Stovall said staffing changes was one of the main reasons the department fell short of this target.
Public works’ call center is for environmental complaints, like potholes, fallen trees, trash collection and other services, officials say.
The finance department has a call center to handle billing. These centers will consolidate into a renovated space in City Hall.
The new call center — eventually with a new phone number — will handle non-utility calls to public works, and the finance department’s call center already started accepting calls to the city’s switchboard, officials said.
The city will pay close attention to whether call takers were professional, helpful and courteous and that callers had a satisfactory experiences, Dickstein said.
“The benefit primary will be enhancing customer service,” Dickstein said. “We have room for a great deal of improvement.”
Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley said citizens usually call the city when they have issues or problems, and the new call center hopefully will mean fewer callers will need to be transferred and have to bounce around to get their questions answered.
The lion’s share of the calls the city receives are about water bills, streets and trash, and the new center is an opportunity to make it is easier to provide assistance and service, the mayor said.
“You won’t have to call around as much, which is really annoying to people,” she said.