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Emergency services valued by residents

Surveys also find programs for youths, seniors rate high

While Las Vegas officials are meeting directly with residents in a series of town hall meetings, the city already has two other surveys indicating that, given the current budget crunch, residents value fire and safety services and programs for youth and seniors the most.

The city gathered data through a telephone survey and focus panels.


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Three sociology professors from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas led the focus panels, which consisted of five groups meeting in October and November. In all, 31 people recruited from seven randomly selected neighborhoods participated.

The results, presented to council members last week, showed that residents are interested in increasing youth programs, maintaining fire and emergency medical services, and continuing to create and maintain parks and community centers.

The panelists said they were satisfied with both fire and emergency medical responses as well as animal control services, and said those should not be cut.

The telephone survey was run by UNLV's Cannon Survey Center, which collected responses from 972 city residents from August to October.

It found that at least 85 percent of respondents said the following should not be reduced: safety services; youth and senior programs; fire prevention; traffic enforcement; and response times to wrecks, medical emergencies, and violent and nonviolent crime.

The city should place more emphasis on economic development and job creation, foreclosure prevention, senior and low-income family services and after-school programs, respondents said.

Twenty percent of respondents said all city services should be reduced. Cultural programs and parks and recreation came in lowest on the phone survey's list of priorities, although the question asked whether money should be added to those programs.

That's not necessarily a contradiction, said Robert Futrell, a sociology professor who led the focus panel part of the survey. The different methods -- phone survey, focus group and town hall -- work together.

"What they're doing is in my view the best they can do with research, which is they're triangulating," Futrell said. "They all provide different kinds of information."

For instance, in the focus groups, parks issues tended to be linked with youth. If youth are important, then parks are too, the panels concluded.

The city is spending $35,000 on Your City, Your Way, a spokesman said -- $25,000 for the surveys and $10,000 for the focus groups.

Contact reporter Alan Choate at achoate@reviewjournal.com or 702-229-6435.

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Too_much_government wrote on January 12, 2010 03:20 PM: The survey was conducted by derelict BIG government UNLV "professors". Their methodology was to survey "neighborhoods" of police stations and firehouses. Telephone numbers were culled from police and fire phone directories.


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SamT wrote on January 12, 2010 02:35 PM: @T: Yes, I do. It's common knowledge among attorneys.


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T wrote on January 12, 2010 01:01 PM: SamT,

I'm sure you have some type of proof for that allegation. This article and Kathy's comment was not directed towards Henderson police.


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SamT wrote on January 12, 2010 12:03 PM: @T: Henderson police engage in "fund-raising" as a matter of course.


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But at what cost? wrote on January 12, 2010 08:53 AM: This survey is not complete. Of course no one wants service delivery in public safety cut (DUH!). But will the firefighters show up slower if they make $92k a year instead of $100k? The survey doesn't ask people how much they should pay for this service.


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T wrote on January 12, 2010 08:43 AM: Kathy,

I will let you in on a little secret. The way to prevent being issued a traffic citation is to obey traffic laws. Do you really think officers enforce traffic laws thinking "this will help generate money for the city and county"?

Two years ago there were close to two hundred fatal traffic accidents in metros jurisdiction. For 2009 that number was under ninety. I would never say that drop happened solely because of increased traffic enforcement, but I'm sure it helped.


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Too_much_government wrote on January 12, 2010 07:30 AM: The city is spending $35,000 on Your City, Your Way

The government should not be allowed to give money to politically connected firms in order to find out the path of least resistance to even MORE government. Is it any wonder the public safety unions make out like bandits?


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Kathy wrote on January 12, 2010 07:07 AM: What a bunch of lies.
Traffic enforcement serves the city in making money off the backs of the motorist. Dirty abusive and out of control cops who are further supported by corrupt judges paint a picture of ABUSE.

Services by definition does not require traffic enforcement to the point of a revenue making scam..

Excessive numbers of police leads to a loss of control, waste, fraud and abuse.

We see it every day and do NOT consider it a valued service.

Many in the system forget who they work for and the constant abuse and harrasment, PTSD they cause just by being there.

Clark County is a bad place to live, visit or raise a family.

The facts are a matter of public record and the statistics prove legal abuse in the valley.