- API
Energy Resources Gas Emergency Response (PUBLIC)
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-10-02T14:22:29.000ZThis version redacts all sensitive information including who the case was submitted to, who was dispatched, actual location of the incident, and the geocoded location of the incident. The data documented in the table below is the information related to each emergency call that is received by Energy Resources. The data serves as the official record for each call and is used for various things such as determining response time, tracking call volume and ultimately serving as the official record of a response if any questions should arise about how Energy Resources handled an emergency call.
- API
Police Incidents
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-09-15T18:15:39.000ZIncidents based on initial police reports taken by officers when responding to calls for service. Data is modified for public use. Address and Location are not exact locations of incidents and have been rounded to nearest hundred block. Lat/Long are approximations only based on rounded hundred block. Incidents reported in this dataset may not correlate with 911 Events datasets and calls for Police service. The City of Mesa does not disclose information that is inflammatory in nature that impacts our citizens. Crimes reported in this data set have not been adjudicated in a court of law for final determination. Although sensitive crimes are included, the approximate address are NOT included. Therefore aggregate totals of crimes are accurate, without providing sensitive information. Addresses are not included for: sexual abuse, sexual assault, suicide, incest, molestation of a child or homicide. Similar information is also provided through the Communitycrimemap.com website, a 3rd party service that visually reviews crime data for Mesa and outlining areas. Some of the data fields provided are used to report to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. For a listing of data fields and description please see their UCR Program Data Collections page. Alternatively, please see the Bureau of Justice Statistics NIBRS website for a listing of data fields.
- API
Traffic Signal Audits
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-10-10T17:50:18.000ZThis dataset describes planned and completed traffic signal audits across the City of Mesa managed transportation system. A traffic signal audit is a formal examination of the number of signalized intersections maintained by the City of Mesa. They are checked for proper programming and operation on a quarterly basis by a formal internal team. The data recorded includes the date by which each intersection needed to be audited, as well as the date the audit was completed.
- API
Energy Resources - Damage Prevention (PUBLIC)
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-10-02T13:30:38.000ZThis version redacts all sensitive information including the person making the report, street number, longitude, latitude, geolocation, and name of excavator. This dataset contains information necessary to compute the number of reportable incidents occurring per month on Mesa’s natural gas system and determine the cause of any damages that may occur.
- API
Transportation Work Orders - Public View
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-10-10T12:55:59.000ZThis data set provides information about work performed on Transportation assets such as street inventory, street lights, traffic signals, signs, and pavement markings. Data are stored on Cityworks servers.
- API
Fire and Medical Incidents Dispatched in City of Mesa - Public View
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-10-10T16:16:31.000ZThis redacted view dataset removes HIPAA protected information for medical calls and unique locations of incidents. Information about incidents dispatched by Fire & Medical for service within the City of Mesa. All dispatch and response times are based on calls received and dispatched by Mesa Regional Dispatch Center (MRDC) only. Calls to 911 are routed by a 911 Control Office to a primary public safety answering point (PSAP). The primary PSAP for emergency calls in the City of Mesa is Police 911 dispatch. Fire and Medical calls are transferred to the MRDC, a secondary PSAP for dispatch. Call handling and response times in this dataset do not include primary PSAP receive, handle and transfer times. NOTE: An incident's Reason Code and Category here may differ from how the call was originally dispatched by 911 CAD. Visit https://www.fcc.gov/general/9-1-1-and-e9-1-1-services and http://www.mesaaz.gov/residents/fire-medical/divisions-sections/dispatch-deployment for more information. Also see http://www.mesaaz.gov/residents/police/divisions/communications/how-does-911-work for additional information about using 911.
- API
PRCF - Parks Ranger Reports
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-10-10T11:19:30.000ZThe Park Rangers report monthly on the number of warnings or citations given, the total number of parks visited for the month, and the total number of warnings or citations that were related to the population of homeless. This data populates directly from a SharePoint form.
- API
Crime Reporting Statistics
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-01T14:40:17.000Z***In January 2020, as part of implementing a new citywide police incident reporting system the City began moving away from reporting crime to the FBI Unified Crime Reporting (UCR) Program and instead to the new National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) format. For this reason, 2020 UCR data may have inconsistencies and/or inaccuracies. A filtered view of UCR data is available for 2011-2019 at https://citydata.mesaaz.gov/Police/Crime-Reporting-Statistics-Uniform-Crime-Reporting/bfen-qa5d As of January 1, 2021, the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) became the national crime data collection program. NIBRS was implemented to improve the overall quality of crime data collected by law enforcement, by capturing details on each single crime incident, as well as on separate offenses within the same incident. The historic Summary Reporting System (SRS) data collection, which collects more limited information than the more robust NIBRS, was phased out to make Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) a NIBRS-only data collection. Coming soon, look for a new dataset based on NIBRS, which will provide more complete and comprehensive data for law enforcement, researchers, and the public. The Uniform Crime Reporting Program collects statistics on the number of offenses known to City of Mesa Police Department. Address and Location data are not exact location of incidents and have been rounded to nearest hundred block. Lat/Long are approximations only based on rounded hundred block. Part 1 offenses are reported monthly and are chosen by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) because they are serious crimes, they occur with regularity in all areas of the country, and they are likely to be reported to police. Part I offenses are defined as: Criminal homicide, Forcible Rape, Robbery, Aggravated Assault, Burglary (breaking or entering), Larceny-theft (except motor vehicle theft), Motor vehicle theft and Arson.
- API
Building Permits (Commercial, Residential and Signs)
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-10-09T19:59:13.000ZBuilding permits issued by City of Mesa. Included: All building permits applied. Public view, full version of this dataset located at https://citydata.mesaaz.gov/Development-Services/Building-Permits-Commercial-Residential-and-Signs-/dzpk-hxfb/data. Not Included: Applications for Documents or Services, Code Compliance Complaints, Planning Cases, or Engineering Projects. It is assumed that all permits have been issued based on meeting all building and zoning codes.
- API
Energy Resources - Locates
citydata.mesaaz.gov | Last Updated 2024-10-05T16:00:06.000ZThis dataset contains the necessary information to compute the average cost of a utility locate in the Mesa and/or Magma Service Areas (see Service Area maps). A utility locate involves identification of all underground utilities prior to excavation in a specified area. A utility locate is initiated, usually by a homeowner or excavator, by calling 811 or contacting Arizona’s 811 center’s website and providing the address, county and nearest cross street of where they’re planning to dig, as well as the type of project they’re completing and the exact area on the property they’re planning to dig. 811 then contacts the city’s utilities so they can mark the presence of any underground utilities in the proposed project area. Utility locates can contribute to increased safety to people and property and can eliminate unexpected costs due to accidental damage of buried utilities. A locate can be initiated by either a homeowner or an excavator. Data being reported may have a 14 day lag.