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Code Enforcement
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-30T12:21:09.260ZBuildings & Inspections' Property Maintenance Division is charged with eliminating blight and building safety hazards and promotes building repair and renovation through education and enforcement to protect the public health, safety and quality of life. Property Maintenance Code Enforcement requests include tenant complaints about poor housing conditions and neighbor complaints of blight on commercial and residential buildings and premises. Zoning complaints relate to illegal land use issues, including (but not limited to) front yard parking on grass, contractor's yards in residential districts and illegal commercial uses in residential districts. For more information on Zoning Code, view the City of Cincinnati Zoning Code (Section 1400-1451 of the Cincinnati Municipal Code). Concentrated Code Enforcement is a house-to-house inspection in code enforcement areas. All buildings in a neighborhood focus area are inspected on the exterior for property maintenance issues. It is a systematic and proactive approach to addressing code violations and is typically performed as part of the Neighborhood Enhancement Program. To make a code enforcement complaint, call 513-591-6000 or visit https://cagismaps.hamilton-co.org/csr/cincinnati To view the status of a complaint: https://cagis.hamilton-co.org/opal/ezTrakSearch.aspx.
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Emissions & Greenhouse Gases
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2020-07-28T15:41:40.493ZThe City of Cincinnati recognizes that climate plays an important role in the quality of life, economic well-being, and long term sustainability of our City and region. Greenhouse gases (GHG) like Carbon Dioxide, Methane, and Nitrous Oxide as the result of human activity are collecting in the Earth’s atmosphere at levels that are capable of altering our climate. The Green Cincinnati Plan outlines steps we can take to mitigate our region’s environmental impact and one of those steps is a greenhouse gas inventory. Cincinnati’s first GHG inventory was conducted in 2006, and serves as the baseline from which our climate impact is measured. This summary of Cincinnati's 2015 Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Analysis shows that our efforts, combined with changes in the region’s energy supply, have been effective in reducing our emissions output. With this information the City of Cincinnati can measure our progress on our path to sustainability and provides data to inform policy and decision making. The Government emissions inventory includes emissions generated from municipal operations, including energy used in water and waste water treatment, city building and facilities operations, streetlights, traffic signals, vehicle fleet and aviation fuel use. Reductions can be attributed to: Street light conversion to LED lightbulbs; Facility energy improvement upgrades/retrofits; Upgrades to Metropolitan Sewer District's incinerators; and Installation of solar panels on some City owned facilities. The Community emissions inventory includes emissions generated from commercial, industrial, and residential gas and electric consumption, motor vehicle transportation, and solid waste generation. Reductions can be attributed to:Incentives for commercial energy upgrades offered by Duke; Grid decarbonization;100% Renewable energy offered to residents and businesses through the City's Energy Aggregation Program; Population loss from 2006 to 2015 (approximately 10%); and Improved waste diversion. Taken together, Government and Community emissions total approximately 7.6M tons CO2e, representing a citywide reduction of 18.4% since the 2006 baseline was established at 9.3M tons CO2e. The largest increases in emissions occurred in the industrial energy and vehicular travel sector, while the largest reductions were seen in the commercial and residential energy sectors. From 2006 to 20015, Cincinnati achieved a city-wide 18.4% reduction in GHG emissions. Based on targets originally established in the 2008 Green Cincinnati Plan, this decrease indicates that the city has met its goal of a 2% reduction in GHG emissions per year. The City of Cincinnati will continue to work to reduce the region’s emissions through the implementation of recommendations of the Green Cincinnati Plan.
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Greenspace Maintenance
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-29T11:56:27.078ZNeighborhood Operations Division (NOD), a division of the Department of Public Services (DPS) is responsible for maintaining a large portion of visible city-owned property. Using the city's Greenspace Maintenance Plan, NOD cleans and maintains city green spaces, areas in the right-of-way (ROW), steps, public fences, bridge underpasses, guardrail buffers, alleys, walls, concrete islands and lots owned by or in the care of DPS (includes mowing, weed spraying, and litter pick-up). Grass cutting occurs April through November: the Department provides a schedule listing the tentative dates for cleaning neighborhoods' green spaces and other related neighborhood cleanup projects. While the Greenspace Maintenance Plan covers work that the City does to proactively maintain clean neighborhoods, DPS also responds to citizen service requests (CSRs) for litter, tall grass/weeds, and dumping on both public and private property (for more information on private property cleaning, see Private Lot Abatement Program).
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Recycling Participation
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-30T12:39:41.070ZThe City of Cincinnati recognizes waste reduction and diversion as critical in our effort to keep our communities clean and litter-free, and key components of our path to sustainability. With the right systems in place, most so-called waste materials are actually valuable resources. Cincinnati began offering curbside recycling to residents and businesses in 1989, and has steadily increased participation and waste-diversion rates over time. With the introduction of RFID technology in recycling carts, the City has been able to use recycling analytics data to target outreach efforts and improve participation, reduce our environmental footprint and save money.
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Potholes (Historical)
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-29T12:37:55.206ZCitizen Service Request (CSR) gives Cincinnati residents the opportunity to submit service request for concerns like potholes, tall grass and missed trash pick-up. Using the Fix It Cincy! Mobile App, the CSR online portal and the hotline (513-591-6000), citizens can submit Citizen Service Requests (CSR) for pothole repairs. The Department of Public Services (DPS) is responsible for repairing potholes on Cincinnati streets.
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Customer Service Satisfaction (Historical)
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-28T11:44:40.644ZCitizen Service Requests (CSR) give Cincinnati residents the opportunity to submit service request for concerns like potholes, tall grass and missed trash pick-up. Using the Fix It Cincy! Mobile App, the customer service request online portal and the hotline (513-591-6000), citizen service requests are routed directly to City departments, including Transportation & Engineering, Buildings & Inspections, Health and Public Services. Once the department's work on the service request ticket is completed and the request is marked as "closed," customers receive an email notification that the work has been completed, followed by a link to an optional customer service feedback survey. The data visualization shows customer satisfaction feedback, by location, service request type, and department work group.
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Street Sweeping
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2024-09-12T12:01:36.830ZThe Department of Public Services (DPS) provides Cincinnati residents with quality solid waste collection, snow removal, highway maintenance, fleet services and architectural maintenance services. The Street Sweeping Program ensures that city streets are regularly cleaned (on a schedule, by neighborhood), and after major events (or in the event of an emergency). Neighborhood Operations Division is responsible for street sweeping, as well as other maintenance and cleaning (including green spaces) in public spaces and the right-of-way. Note: Streets are only swept when temperatures are above freezing.
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Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-10T18:17:02.906ZEvery time an emergency medical service (EMS) incident is reported, all incident information provided is captured in the city's Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD) system. This data helps emergency incident dispatchers determine the medical category, severity level of the emergency, and appropriate response level. Once first responders are dispatched to provide medical aid, they update the incident disposition (on-scene status) in CAD to reflect what they find on-scene. The data displayed in the dashboard is only for the Cincinnati Fire Department's (CFD) responses to reported emergency medical incidents, and does not include patient information or medical outcome data.
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Traffic Crashes
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-03T19:48:50.248ZThe Cincinnati Police Department (CPD) records all traffic crash incident data in the City through their Record Management System (RMS) that stores agency-wide data about law enforcement operations. Each incident is a record of a traffic crash that occurred in the City of Cincinnati and was reported to CPD. The data displayed in this page includes information on all fatal, injury, and non-injury crashes such as; crash location type, weather, manner of crash, road type, and driver demographics. You can find additional information on traffic accidents, such as how to report one, on the Cincinnati Police Department's website.
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Life Expectancy
insights.cincinnati-oh.gov | Last Updated 2023-08-22T12:23:38.689ZThe Cincinnati Health Department has analyzed data on the change in life expectancy at birth from 2001-2009 to 2007-2015 in City of Cincinnati neighborhoods. Life expectancy is calculated here through a combination of data from the Cincinnati Health Department, Ohio Department of Health Bureau of Vital Statistics, and the U.S. Census Bureau.