The Columbus Dispatch

Data: Police response varies widely

Wait times increase 12% in last 2 years

- Bethany Bruner

In tense and traumatic situations when 911 is called about a crime or an accident, time can feel like it is in slow motion while you await for police to arrive.

Seconds can feel like minutes, and minutes can feel like, well, forever.

But according to a Dispatch analysis of data from Columbus police since 2019, it not only seems like it’s taking longer for Columbus police to respond to some calls — it really is taking longer.

Average response times for all calls to

Columbus police since 2019 have gone up nearly 3 minutes, or 12%, from 23 minutes and 36 seconds in 2019 to 26 minutes and 28 seconds through Sept. 30 in 2021.

And that response time can vary, depending on the type of call and where you are located in the city, the analysis found.

For example, the average response time this year for a priority-one call — such as a shooting — shows a range from seven minutes and eight seconds in Franklinto­n to 10 minutes and 57 seconds on the city’s East Side.

Columbus police acknowledg­e average response times have gone up, but division officials contend that it is not to the extent the data show because the numbers don’t always reflect how

officers are responding, particular­ly in the highest priority calls.

The total number of calls for service in 2020 decreased by about 12% from 2019, according to police data, going from 232,470 in 2019 to 205,115 in 2020.

The average response time also decreased by about 58 seconds, or 4%, from 23 minutes and 58 seconds to 22 minutes and 34 seconds. Those decreases at least partly reflect people staying home due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, the 167,314 calls police had received through Sept. 30 of this year were on pace to be more than the total 205,115 calls received in 2020 and at least the same as the 232,470 calls received in 2019. And the time it takes to respond to those calls continues to go up.

What the data indicate

Police data provided to The Dispatch for analysis is broken down by each of the city’s 20 patrol precincts, as well as by the priority of the calls, which are given a number between one and five. Priority-one calls involve life-threatenin­g situations, while priority-five calls, such as a parking complaint, are calls that can be handled as time allows.

The average response time citywide for a priority-one call in 2021 — calculated as the time between when a 911 call is answered until an officer notifies dispatcher­s through a button on their cruisers or by radio that they have arrived on the scene — was 8 minutes and 15 seconds, as of Sept. 30.

In 2019, that citywide average was 6 minutes and 3 seconds.

In Precinct 19, an area on the city’s West Side that includes the Hilltop, more priority-one calls were received than in any other precinct in the city, with 395 through Sept. 30. The response times for those calls have increased 77% from 2019.

Two years ago, the average time was 4 minutes and 25 seconds. The average response time through the first nine months of 2021 was 7 minutes and 50 seconds.

Sgt. Joseph Albert, a public informatio­n officer for the division, said the average times are not a completely accurate representa­tion of how quickly officers respond. Officers have a button on their in-cruiser computers that they are able to press when they arrive at a scene.

In high-pressure emergency responses, however, Albert said, officers might forget to press the button as they react to what is occurring.

And in some instances, Albert said, the computer in the cruiser is delayed and doesn’t immediatel­y provide an officer the opportunit­y to mark themselves as having arrived on the scene until after they’ve already begun handling the call.

“The vast majority of the time, when those priority-one calls go out, officers are dropping what they’re doing to go,” Albert said. “There are exceptions, (such as) when you’ve got one call and then another one happens right away and you can’t leave.”

There also have been dozens of instances, some of which were provided to The Dispatch by Albert and others in the data, that show officers are being noted by dispatcher­s as making an arrest even before being noted as having arrived. Dispatcher­s are often noting what officers are doing in real-time, Albert said, so as not to miss any informatio­n, versus noting the actual arrival time.

Those situations drive up the average response time data, Albert said, and provide an inaccurate picture of how quickly officers are actually responding.

One call from May showed an officer responding to a woman’s report that a previous occupant was attempting to break in the window at a home on the South Side. Officers had arrived and taken a suspect into custody within 2 minutes of the call being dispatched. However, another hour and 41 minutes elapsed before the officers were marked as being on the scene.

Albert said that’s because the officers were reacting to the situation and not hitting the button in the cruiser showing them on scene.

“When an officer pulls up to a scene and there’s a shooting, they’re not worrying about pressing that button,” Albert said. “They’re worried about what’s going on in front of them.”

Not just the emergencie­s

The data provided by Columbus police show there were 111,443 priority-two calls reported to Columbus police in 2019,with an average response time of 15 minutes and 9 seconds.

Priority-two calls are the most common for officers to respond to, according to the data, and can include most domestic-violence runs, other felony crimes that have just occurred or a crime in which a suspect remains on the scene or in the immediate area.

Through Sept. 30, there were 84,278 priority-two calls in 2021, with an average response time of exactly 20 minutes.

Albert said priority-two calls can be the most time-consuming for officers.

Domestic-violence calls that result in an arrest can take between three and four hours for a responding officer because of the amount of paperwork that needs to be done, including a lethality assessment of the suspect for the victim, charging documentat­ion for the suspect and additional informatio­n about the arrest, Albert said. During those calls, officers can’t leave to respond to other types of calls, regardless of their priority.

On the most common priority-two or lower-priority calls, the responsibi­lity for alerting dispatcher­s that they are on the scene falls completely on the officer in the majority of cases, Albert said.

For residents such as Chuck Jones, however, the response times or lack of response can be frustratin­g. Earlier this year, Jones was at a restaurant on the city’s South Side when he and others saw catalytic converters being cut off vehicles in an adjacent parking lot. When Jones approached the men, one implied he had a firearm.

“Because I said (to the 911 dispatcher) he might have a gun, they sent somebody out there. They generally don’t send someone out,” said Jones, who lives in Merion Village.

Two weeks later, the same suspects were cutting more converters off cars in the same parking lot, he said.

“I get that they have more pressing things to do, but I’m wondering if everyone’s saying that crime isn’t as bad (and) I wonder if part of the violent crime is people who are just frustrated,” Jones said. “All of my neighbors, we’re all armed. When we hear something going on in the alley or whatever, we go out armed, just in case. Luckily, nothing has happened, but there will be a time when something does happen, when someone has to take matters into their own hands because the police department won’t.”

Jones said he understand­s that police can do only so much, and that if prosecutor­s don’t press charges, such as in petty theft cases, it makes it hard for an officer to try to enforce that law. Jones said the city has to take a more active role in ensuring that the community has the services and response it needs.

“The city doesn’t care what individual­s have to say until it is election time, and then it’s just lip service,” he said.

In at least one case, a woman said she waited four hours for police to respond after she reported being carjacked near German Village. Police have said there were other priority calls in the area and when the woman reported she went to another location to wait, the call got dropped to a lower priority, extending the response time further.

Zerqa Abid, a member of the Greater Hilltop Area Commission and founder of My Project USA, a national initiative to protect and empower youth and families in underprivi­leged and underserve­d communitie­s, said she regularly hears concerns about response times being 40 to 45 minutes or longer.

Abid said that in 2019 she called police because of a belligeren­t man inside the My Project USA building. She said police didn’t respond for more than 45 minutes, and by the time officers got there, the man had left.

“Anything could have happened during that time,” she said.

On another occasion, Abid said she got an alert about a burglary alarm at a youth center and saw a man inside the building on security cameras. The man fled when the alarm went off. Police did not arrive until about two hours later, she said.

Abid said she later found out the incident was classified by police as a false alarm, despite someone actually going into the building. Abid, who chairs the Greater Hilltop Area Commission’s public safety committee, said she has taken her concerns and those she has heard from others to police.

“What I heard is that there’s a lack of officers, or on a certain day, if something else is going on, they’re all busy,” Abid said. “They’ll respond if violence happens, but it’ll depend on what’s going on and that takes more time.”

What’s being done

Response times can be affected by the number of patrol officers available. As officers continue to depart the Columbus

Division of Police in record numbers, up to 100 more senior officers with 25 years or more of experience are eligible to take a one-time $200,000 buyout approved by the city earlier this year. Officers who are eligible have until early 2022 to express their interest in the buyout program.

The city is trying to replace these departing officers through additional police recruit training classes. Mayor Andrew J. Ginther has allotted funds in his 2022 budget for three police recruit classes, increasing the number of new officers being brought into the division.

But other factors, such as the number of patrol officers required to work guard duty on their shifts, also can affect response times.

Guard duty occurs when an officer is stationed at a crime scene to keep the scene secure for detectives and the collection of evidence. Officers also can be called to work guard duty to watch victims or suspects who are hospitaliz­ed. With record numbers of homicides in 2020 and now again in 2021, more officers are pulled from available service for those guard duties.

“It’s natural for (response times) to go up with less officers on the streets,” Albert said. “We’ve also been having more guard duties than we’ve ever had before.”

On the morning of Nov. 3, first shift patrol officers were being pulled from across the city for nearly a dozen guard duty positions at Ohiohealth Grant Medical Center, as well as at least four positions at Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center. Officers also were working guard duty at a shooting scene on the Northeast Side, providing traffic control for a crash scene on the West Side and handling another reported crash on Interstate 71.

Albert said Columbus police are continuing to undergo an internal audit to determine the best allocation of resources, including potentiall­y merging or eliminatin­g some detective bureaus. The division also is looking at offering overtime to officers for guard duty positions, allowing more officers to be on patrol.

He said Chief Elaine Bryant is wholly committed to making sure there are as many officers available for patrol as possible. For example, the police division and the city currently are exploring options for allowing lateral transfer hires of patrol officers from other police department­s, which is not currently permitted under the Columbus city charter.

The Fraternal Order of Police Capital City Lodge No. 9, which represents Columbus police, has said it supports allowing the hiring patrol officers from other department­s with sufficient background checks first.

“Patrol is the backbone of the division,” Albert said. “They’re the ones who are out there on the streets, engaging with people and interactin­g with the community.”

But Abid said she believes long-term solutions to the issue of longer response times have to address more than just having more officers on the streets.

“Short-term, yes, we need more officers, but long-term that’s not the solution in my eyes,” Abid said. “In the longterm, there’s a solution to the gangs and violence that involves more youth programmin­g. Not just police stations being open and more officers, but community services and programs that would address food insecurity, drug issues, and all kinds of other issues.” bbruner@dispatch.com @bethany_bruner

 ?? JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? The average amount of time it takes for Columbus police officers to respond to a 911 call has increased nearly three minutes, or 12%, from 2019, according to an analysis by The Dispatch of data provided through the Division of Police.
JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH The average amount of time it takes for Columbus police officers to respond to a 911 call has increased nearly three minutes, or 12%, from 2019, according to an analysis by The Dispatch of data provided through the Division of Police.

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