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From YouTube: City of Charleston CPAC Public Webinar 5/4/22
Description
City of Charleston CPAC Public Webinar 5/4/22
A
A
A
All
right:
well,
since
we
you
know,
we
want
to
be
on
time,
let's
go
ahead
and
start
so
you
know
I
want
to
thank
everybody
for
joining
us
for
the
city
of
charleston
citizens,
police
advisory
council's
meeting
regarding
the
police
data
initiative.
As
you,
as
you
probably
read,
we're
putting
on
these.
A
You
know
periodic
informational
sessions
to
make
sure
that
we're
getting
the
information
from
you
know
our
law
enforcement
partners
at
the
charleston
police
department
in
front
of
the
community,
and
we
know
they
they
hold
sessions
on
all
these
things,
and
we
want
to
do
more
of
that
so
that
we
can
hopefully
expand
the
umbrella
of
information.
That's
going
out.
So,
as
you
know,
you
saw
in
the
in
the
invite
that
we
sent
the
city
of
charleston's
got
an
amazing
tool
called
the
police
that
initiative
and
what
what
that's
really
been
in
place
since
2017.
A
So
it's
not
as
new
as
it
may
sound,
but
it's
been
a
work
in
progress.
That's
evolved
over
time,
you're
going
to
hear
a
lot
about
that
tonight
and
you're
going
to
hear
about
there's
a
road
map
going
forward
because,
like
anything
else,
you
deal
with
with
technology,
you
know
the
more
time
you
have
the
more
enhancements
you
make,
the
more
you
improve
on
it,
but
this
is
a
great
tool
to
give.
Some
transparency
in
fact
gives
a
lot
of
transparency
into
what
the
police
department's
doing.
You
can
see
things
like
complaints.
A
You
can
see
incidents,
you
can
see
arrests,
you
can,
you
know
separate
fact
from
fiction.
There's
a
lot
of
dialogue
out
there
in
the
public
about
you
know.
Even
in
my
own
neighborhood,
everybody
thinks
there's
crime
on
every
street,
and
then
you
know
when
you
go
look
at
the
dashboard
and
you
compare
that
to
what
people
think
are
the
rumors.
You
get
a
better
indication
of
the
tour
activity
in
your
neighborhood,
which
makes
you
more
aware,
but
also
helps
you
interact
with
our
you
know:
law
enforcement
partners
as
well.
A
So
what
we've
done
is:
we've
asked
david
crosby
and
lieutenant
salkhill
yo,
who
handle
a
lot
of
the
data
information
to
give
us
a
quick
presentation
on
the
tool.
It's
a
website.
You
can
access
and
they'll
go
through
that
to
really
help
us
understand
the
tool
we
have
in
front
of
us,
so
the
community
can
also
give
feedback
on
things
that
we'd
like
to
see
as
enhancements
or
just
to
better
understand
how
to
use
the
tool
as
it
is.
A
I'm
going
to
turn
this
over
to
emily
broome,
who
also
sits
on
the
advisory
council
with
me
and
she's
going
to
host
this
evening.
So
emily
I'm
going
to
give
it
over
to
you.
B
Thank
you
paul
and
thank
you
for
everyone
for
joining
us.
We
hope
that
you
find
this
very
informative
and
that,
if
you
think
of
some
questions
that
you
want
to
ask
us,
while
we're
doing
a
presentation,
please
enter
them
into
the
chat,
do
not
hesitate
to
do
that.
B
We
want
this
to
be
interactive
when
we
get
to
the
question
and
answer
portion
of
the
presentation
and
again
thank
you
to
lieutenant
bryan
salkheld
and
to
david
crosby
for
putting
this
together
and
always
thank
you
to
paul
for
all
the
help
that
you
do
to
make
this
possible
as
well.
But
I
will
go
ahead
and
get
started
with
the
presentation.
B
We
want
to
be
timely
and
make
sure
we
don't
take
up
too
much
of
anyone's
time,
but
our
other
hope
for
this
is
that
anybody
that
is
participating
that
you
also
share
the
information
with
other
people
in
your
community
in
your
neighborhood
and
let
them
know
that
this
is
available
and
things
that
you
learned
tonight.
It's
always
good
to
pass
the
word
along,
so
we
hope
that
this
continues
to
grow
as
we
do
these
throughout
the
year
and
that
the
word
gives
out
to
me
that
we
have
more
participants
in
the
future.
B
C
C
All
right,
yeah,
thank
you.
Thank
you,
everyone
very
much
for
attending
this
tonight.
You
know
we
think
the
data
is
very
important
and,
as
mentioned,
this
resource
has
been
in
place
in
2017
since
2017
in
some
sort
of
fashion.
So
you
know
the
more
eyes
that
we
get
on
this
and
the
more
people
that
we
we.
Let
know
that
this
exists,
the
more
feedback.
You
know
the
more
data
we
can
provide
and
kind
of
make
it
better
so
that
it
serves
the
community
needs
and
kind
of
open
up
some
of
that
dialogue
just
really
quickly.
C
You
know
this
is
me,
I'm
the
data,
integration
and
analysis
manager
for
the
city.
That's
just
a
fancy
way
of
saying
that
you
know
I'm
responsible
for
maintaining
access
to
our
data
and
then
the
analysis
portion
I'm
fortunate
enough
to
work
with
a
very
talented
team
of
of
analysts
in
our
crime
intel
unit
and
those
are
the
ones
that
are
going
to
put
together.
You
know
our
reports,
they
aggregate
a
lot
of
information.
C
You
know
for
this
web
resource
as
well
for
the
community,
but
they
also
provide
information
to
our
command
staff
and
administrative
staff
so
that
they
can
make
you
know
appropriate
decisions
based
on
the
data
in
front
of
them,
so
police
data
initiative.
You
know
you'll
hear
that
term
thrown
around
a
lot.
You
know
what
is
it
exactly?
The
easiest
way
for
me
to
describe
it
is
the
national
policing
institute
came
up
with
an
idea,
you
know
or
a
challenge.
C
C
So
this
whole
initiative
was
just
a
chance
for
a
police
department
to
either
say:
hey
I've
got
data,
I
want
to
share
it
and
then
they
have
a
national
map.
They'll
show
you
the
you
know:
120
different
law
agencies
across
the
united
states
that
are
currently
sharing,
but
it
also
allows
for
citizens
to
ask
if
their
department
is
not
sharing.
You
know
they
can.
C
They
can
bridge
that
conversation
to
to
see
if
they
can
get
their
department
as
part
of
this
program
as
well,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day,
it's
all
about
you
know,
transparency
and
trying
to
get
this
information
out
to
our
community.
C
So
as
we
move
forward,
this
is
our
site.
This
is
the
the
main
landing
page
and
originally,
and
I
had
prepared
an
entire
spread,
or
you
know,
presentation
on
this
to
kind
of
walk
you
through
it,
but
instead
I
think
I'm
just
going
to
jump
on
over
to
our
website,
because
I
think
it'll
be
a
little
bit
more
helpful,
helping
you
to
navigate
it.
So,
first
of
all,
how
do
you
get
to
it?
You
know:
that's
probably
the
first
question
that
we
get
a
lot
of
times.
C
So
we
already
started
with
our
charleston-sc.gov.
That's
our
main
website.
You
just
have
to
remember
three
more
letters
afterwards,
if
you
type
in
pdi
it'll,
take
you
to
the
exact
same
website.
So
that's
a
little
bit
easier
to
remember
than
you
know,
maybe
going
through
our
website
all
right.
So
once
you're
here,
you
know
again
you'll
kind
of
see
our
main
data
sets.
We
break
everything
out
to
professional
standards,
dashboard
our
opstat
report,
our
incident
map
and
our
police
response
data
sets.
C
C
C
How
can
we
use
that
that
data
to
leverage
our
day-to-day
to
know
where
our
you
know
the
high
crime
areas
are
the
time
of
day
different
types
of
analysis,
different
types
of
trends,
so,
in
other
words,
leveraging
that
data
to
make
you
know
informed
decisions,
the
city
of
charleston
adopted
this
method
and
then
over
time,
we've
kind
of
adapted
it
to
what
we
do
on
a
day-to-day
basis,
and
this
is
actually
a
report
that
does
go
to
our
command
staff
every
single
monday
and
so
the
one
that
we're
about
to
click
on
was
actually
uploaded
this
morning.
C
So
once
you
get
to
this
landing
page,
the
very
first
document
will
always
be
the
most
recent
opstat
report
and
this
is
a
running
report.
So
that
means
that
it's
going
to
have
information
up
to
the
point
that
it
was
compiled
for
that
particular
year.
You
can
go
back
to
historical
years,
you
know
and
see
2021,
20
and
so
on
and
so
forth
and
see
the
reports
for
those
years,
but
for
the
current
year,
you're
only
going
to
see
the
most
recent
because
it's
going
to
include
everything
before
it.
C
It's
just
a
pdf,
but
it's
going
to
open
up
in
this
environment,
as
you
can
see,
it'll
tell
you
when
it
was
uploaded,
tells
you
the
week
and
when
we
scroll
down
and
get
into
this,
you
know
you're
going
to
start
with
just
an
overall
look
at
quantitative
analysis
of
the
entire
department
for
for
not
just
this
week,
but
this
month
this
quarter
and
year
to
date,
you're
also
going
to
look
at
incidents
and
you're
going
to
see
a
five-year
range,
which
is
this
black
bar
you're,
going
to
see
last
year,
which
is
this
red
bar
on
each
black
bar
you're,
going
to
see
where
we
are
currently
in
this
year
for
each
month
and
then
you're
also
going
to
get
a
projection
based
on
you
know.
C
Current
numbers
that
are
coming
in
you'll
have
the
same
thing
for
a
rest,
so
that
gives
you
a
kind
of
an
overview
of
where
we're
trending
are
we
going
up?
You
know:
are
we
at
the
top
of
our
five
year
range
at
the
bottom?
You
know
kind
of.
Are
we
going
in
the
right
direction
and
it's
the
same
thing
down
here
so
you're
going
to
start
seeing
you
know
what
was
what
is
our
our
current
numbers?
What
was
this
last
last
week?
What
was
it
last
year?
C
C
Some
people
are
a
little
bit
more
visual,
and
so
this
is
just
a
visual
representation
of
of
where,
in
the
city
are
things
kind
of
you
know
getting
a
little
bit
as
we
call
warmer
or
cooler
and
then,
as
we
go
down,
we
actually
break
each
of
these
out
into
teams.
Now,
for
those
that
aren't
familiar
with
teams,
teams
are
just
kind
of
like
our
precincts,
there's
different
parts
of
the
city
that
we
break
it
up
to
to
to
better
manage
it.
So
team
one
is
downtown.
C
C
C
C
As
we
go
through
the
bottom,
we
have
one
more
sheet
on
here,
that's
a
little
bit
different
and
this
is
something
that's
kind
of
been
added
in
the
last
year
and
a
half
to
two
years.
So
one
thing
that
we
look
at
a
lot
is:
where
are
we
spending
our
time?
You
know
where
are
the
911
calls
coming?
I,
and,
as
you
can
see,
you
know
a
lot
of
times.
These
calls
aren't
exactly
what
you
think
that
they
might
be.
C
You
know
we
have
traffic
accidents,
a
disturbance
or
nuisance
9-1-1
open
line,
but
then
you
also
have
a
lot
of
alarm
calls
with
a
a
lot
of
these
being.
You
know
false
alarms,
so
this
kind
of
lets
our
our
command
kind
of
know
where
we're
spending
a
lot
of
our
calls
a
lot
of
our
time,
a
lot
of
our
effort
and
then
as
well,
you
start
to
see
overdose
and
suicides.
C
Unfortunately,
you
know
a
lot
of
news
has
been
out
there
about
a
rise
in
overdoses
and
suicides,
and
you
know
we're
starting
to
see
some
of
the
data
to
support
that,
but
we
also
found
that
we
weren't,
you
know
really
tracking
this
very
well.
You
know
so.
We've
put
a
number
of
measures
into
place
to
to
start
tracking
that
kind
of
information
so
that
we
can
better.
You
know,
report
on
it,
track
it
and
at
least
have
a
baseline.
C
You
know
it's
not
perfect,
but
it
is
definitely
better
than
where
it
was
a
couple
years
ago,
and
that's
also
why
you're
going
to
see
that
it
only
goes
back
to
2021
because
of
when
we
implemented
those
new
changes
to
make
the
data
to
what
we
consider
to
be
reportable.
C
It
will
tell
you
exactly
what
you're
seeing
it's
going
to
tell
you
who,
who
put
it
together
when
it
was
put
together
the
data
sources
that
it
came
from
and
if
we
exclude
anything
so
like
in
this
report,
you
know
we
exclude
unfounded
cases,
so
it
again,
it'll
go
through
and
it'll
tell
you
any
nuances
so
that
you
know
exactly
what
you're
getting
so
that
you
don't
think
that
that
the
numbers
are
looking
funny
or
how
did
we
get
there
that
that's
what
those
footnotes
are
for
to
tell
you
exactly
how
we
derived
it
and
how
we
calculated
it.
C
C
One
thing
I
just
wanted
to
go
back
over
if
you
look
at
this
layout,
this
is
actually
how
all
of
our
information
in
2017
before
we
started
making
changes
was
presented.
It
was
just
a
dump
of
files
into
this
kind
of
structure
where
it
was
just
a
word,
and
you
had
to
kind
of
filter
through
to
find
what
you
were
looking
for.
C
They
were
kind
of
disjointed.
They
weren't
always
in
the
right
order,
and
it
was
very
difficult
to
navigate
and
find
what
it
was
exactly
you
needed,
or
what
you
were
trying
to
get
off
of
our
site
so
because
of
that
we'll
go
into
our
next
set,
which
is
our
police
response.
Data
sets,
and
this
is
something
that
derived
in
2017,
to
try
to
make
this
information
more
approachable.
C
C
It'll
take
us
to
this,
and,
as
with
anything,
we
try
to
tell
you
what
you're
looking
at
kind
of
at
the
very
beginning.
You
know
it
gives
you
a
description.
Why
it's
here,
what
it's
used
for
and
each
of
these
tabs
represent
a
different
type
of
data
and
again
at
the
very
beginning,
it's
going
to
explain
you
know
what
are
the
arrests?
What
are
we
giving
you?
These
are
also
referred
to
as
story
maps,
so
the
way
that
this
flows,
you
know
a
lot
of
people-
are
left
to
right.
C
So
this
is
everything
in
2022
up
to
the
first
quarter,
so
this
particular
resource
is
manually
updated
once
a
quarter,
and
one
common
thing
that
you're
going
to
see
is
a
lot
of
our
information.
Right
now
is
is
manually
uploaded,
which
is
something
we're
going
to
try
to
get
away
from,
and
we've
already
started
to,
but
so
right
now
this
is
not
real
time.
It'll
be
each
quarter,
usually
within
the
first
14
days
of
the
of
the
next
quarter.
This
gets
manually
updated.
C
So
each
of
those
arrests
from
the
first
quarter
get
plotted
onto
these
maps,
and
then
we
also
provide
raw
data.
So
you
can
get
a
spreadsheet
that
has
all
of
this
information,
and
you
can
you
know
plot
it
yourself.
You
can
run
your
own
analysis.
You
can
do
your
own
totals
if
you'd
like
to.
We
also
provide
a
shape
file,
which
is
basically
a
map
file.
C
So
if
people
are
familiar
with
esri,
they
can
load
that
that
file,
they
basically
don't
have
to
redo
the
work
they
can
just
load
the
file
in
that
program
and
get
these
dots
already
plotted.
Kmz
is
basically
the
google
equivalent
to
the
shape
file.
So
if
you
like
google
maps,
that
is
a
file
that
you
can
actually
load
in
there
and
it
will
plot
these
as
well.
C
This
map
is
also
interactive.
You
can
zoom
in
to
kind
of
get
greater
detail
and
then
each
of
these
points
you
can
actually
click
on,
and
whenever
you
click
on
this,
you
know
you're
going
to
get
whatever
fields
that
we're
providing
for
for
each
data
set.
You
know
it's
usually
going
to
give
you
the
date
the
time,
a
general
location.
C
C
So
another
thing
that
can
sometimes
get
hidden
and
overlooked
on
on
this
particular
map
is
so
this
particular
record
actually
has
more
than
one.
That
means
that
more
than
one
person
was
arrested
at
this
particular
address
during
this
time
frame
and
the
way
that
I
know
that
is
this-
this
little
arrow
right
here.
So
if
you
were
to
click
on
that,
it'll
actually
take
you
through
the
records,
so
you
can
see
the
other
ones.
This
tends
to
happen
more
at
businesses,
not
quite
as
much
as
at
a
residence.
C
C
C
C
All
right,
so
that's
the
open.
You
know
dated
response
sets,
you
know
fairly
straightforward.
You
know
just
remember
those
tabs,
you
know
read
the
the
top
the
description
to
tell
you
what
what
it
is
that
you're
getting
and
just
know
that
this
is
updated.
Quarterly.
C
C
You
know
how
do
we
make
the
data
just
a
little
bit
more
approachable
to
get
some
of
those
larger
number
data
sets
like
calls
for
service
where
you
have
a
hundred
thousand
in
a
year
to
where
people
can
really
kind
of
digest
that
a
little
bit
easier
than
just
looking
at
just
thousands
of
ma
dots
on
a
map,
and
so
that's
when
we
started
thinking
about
dashboards.
C
And
again,
you
know
at
the
beginning,
it'll
give
you
a
statement.
You
know
as
to
what
this
data
set
is
the
information
that's
going
to
go
there.
This
one
also
has
contact
information.
So
if
you'd
like
to
contact
the
office
of
internal
affairs,
all
of
that
information
is
here
and
as
we
go
through,
you
can
see.
C
This
is
kind
of
our
first
attempt
at
a
kind
of
a
more
modern
dashboard,
it's
taking
a
whole
bunch
of
information
and
just
trying
to
make
it
super
visual,
very
easy
to
look
at
and
and
just
to
get
that
top
level
view.
You
know
everything
in
here
is
also
clickable,
so
this
little
slider
bar
is
your
date.
So
you
know
I
can
change
the
date
range
and
all
of
these
will
update
you
notice
that
there
are
two
different
date
bars,
because
these
are
different.
Data
sets,
so
they're
filtering
off
of
different
data
fields.
C
Some
questions
that
we
get
asked
about
this
particular
data
set
is
how
do
I
have
693
allegations?
If
I
only
have
687
officers
listed,
you
know,
and
unfortunately
that
means
that
one
officer
may
have
had
multiple
allegations.
You
know
and
then,
as
for
this,
you
know
the
beauty
is.
You
know
we
have
345
submissions,
but
there
were
610
officers
involved
in
in
in
the
complements.
C
Then,
as
we
go
to
the
next
screen,
one
thing
that
you
can
see
is
we
really
start
to
break
out
the
type
of
of
allegations
that
have
come
in
and
it
gives
you
a
count.
The
only
limitation
currently
for
this
particular
type
of
data
that
we
have
here
is
we
do
not
have
a
date
range
or
slider
to
allow
you
to
depict
the
date
range
at
this
time.
Just
given
the
complexity
of
of
how
we
have
to
generate
this
particular
information,
but
that
is
something
that
we're
working
on.
C
So
super
user
friendly,
you
know,
very
approachable,
pretty
straightforward
and-
and
so
this
was
kind
of
our
first
step
at
doing
a
dashboard,
but
this
was
also
our
first
time
putting
out
any
sort
of
internal
affairs
data
which
is
actually
a
big
step
for
us
and
something
that
was
inside
of
the
racial
bias.
Audit.
C
So
fast
forward
a
little
bit
later
last
year,
so
you
know
that
first
dashboard
came
out
last
year.
We
then
decided
to
put
together
an
incident
map.
You
know
this
is
something
that
you
know
a
lot
of
departments.
Have
you
know
some
people
use
community
crime
map.
You
know,
I
believe,
that's
what
north
charleston
other
agencies
have.
So
we
wanted
to
build
our
own
kind
of
in
in
a
way
that
we
thought
that
was
more
appropriate
for
our
information
or
displayed
a
lot
easier.
C
It's
going
to
bring
up
this
map
and
you
know
just
to
give
you
an
idea
of
what's
coming
up
here.
It's
kind
of
what
we
call
part
one
crimes
or
op
stack
crimes,
but
here's
a
list
of
exactly
what
you're
gonna
see
and
what
the
icons
are,
and
so
now
we're
just
gonna
walk
through
this.
This
is
kind
of
how
we
envision
you
or
citizens
going
through
our
data
to
make
it
significantly
more
approachable
and
easier
to
use.
C
C
A
A
C
C
And
select
the
date
range
that
you'd
like
so
let's
just
go
for
started
this
year
and
to
the
defaults,
and
you
turn
these
filters
on
and
off.
So
now
it's
going
to
populate
everything.
So
if
I
click
that
filter
it's
going
to
apply
that
filter,
you
know.
So
if
I
just
want
aggregated
assault
with
a
firearm-
and
you
could
do
hour
of
crime
that
one's
a
little
bit
more
finicky,
you
know
you
need
to
do
military
time
on
that.
C
But
probably
the
biggest
feature
of
this
that
I
think
everybody
really
likes
is
that
you
can
actually
type
in
your
address.
So
if
I
go
up
here-
and
I
say,
180
lockwood-
it's
going
to
take
it-
you
know
to
whatever
my
address
is
so
I'm
gonna
have
to
find
my
house.
You
can
just
type
your
address
up
there
and
it'll.
Take
you
straight
to
to
your
area
and
again
these
these
maps
are
zoomable.
You
can
zoom
in
and
out.
C
C
Whatever
I
am
seeing
on
my
screen,
this
total
will
automatically
change.
So
if
I
zoom
in,
if
I'm
going
around
my
house-
and
I
don't
know
exactly
what's
going
on
in
my
area-
it's
now
going
to
tell
me
you
know
there
are
33
incidents
in
this
area
and
what
type
they
are
and
then
you
can
expand
these
and
actually
click
on
individual
ones
and
it'll
highlight
them
and
tell
you
what
they
are
or
you
can
click
on
the
map
you
know
and
and
get
information
on
each
one
of
these.
C
Another
option
you
have
is
you
also
can
change
the
map?
You
know
some
people
don't
like
this
map
they
would
like
to
have
you
know
more
of
a
google
earth
type
look
of
where
they
are.
You
can
do
that.
You
can
make
it
dark
gray.
I
mean
kind
of
whatever
your
your
preference
is,
and
so
the
footnote
on
this
one
is
actually
at
the
end.
So
the
little
icon
of
the
police
badge
will
actually
tell
you
again
your
source
data
and
how
it's
counted.
C
And
then
you
also
have
the
ability
to
come
here,
and
let's
say
you
know
you
want
to
print
something
out
for
your
neighborhood.
You
can
zoom
in
to
whatever
it
is.
You
want
select
the
the
format
that
you
would
like
it
in
the
file
type
that
you
would
like
it
in
and
it
will
actually
print
you
out.
A
report
screen
captain
and
everything
with
the
type
of
information
and
a
key
of
what
you
were
just
looking
at.
C
Another
thing
to
keep
in
mind
is
this
is
actually
the
first
automated
data
set
that
we
have
on
our
website.
So
this
is
actually
no
manual
entry
on
our
end,
our
manual
need
it's
actually
updated
weekly.
It
does
have
a
weak
delay
on
purpose
that
just
allows
our
our
you
know,
investigators
to
go
through
and
to
properly
update
the
case
and
get
the
correct
charges
so
that
we're
not
you
know
changing
the
numbers
too
much
and
generally
with
that
one
week
delay.
It
gives
you
a
more
accurate
picture
of
what's
actually
out
there.
B
B
C
Right
yeah,
no,
that's
a
great
question
and
and
the
answer
it
there
is
it
it
depends,
but
I
mean
the
beauty
is:
all
of
these
will
work
to
some
capacity,
no
matter
if
it's
on
a
cell
phone
or
a
tablet,
but
those
newer
features
that
we
were
showing
you
kind
of
that
instant
map
and
that
professional
standards
dashboard.
Those
are
mobile
optimized,
so
they
will
actually
change
the
way
that
they
function
and
flow
so
that
it's
a
more
user-friendly
experience
on
a
phone
with
bigger
tiles
buttons,
so
that
those
are
really
nice.
C
B
C
C
It's
a
lot
of
information,
that's
not
easily
digested,
or
you
know,
kind
of
sliced
through
you
know,
especially
as,
as
you
mentioned,
a
lot
of
citizens
really
want
to
know
what's
going
on
in
my
area,
and
you
know,
maybe
I
don't
want
to
have
to
click
on
seven
tabs
to
know
how
many
of
this
this
and
this
you
know
we
could
potentially
put
them
all
in
one
place
and
ask
you
you
know,
show
me
these
particular
data
sets
so
kind
of
making.
What's
already
there.
C
Better
is
definitely
a
huge
priority
and
I
think
something
that
we
could
do.
You
know
probably
quicker
out
of
all
the
things
on
the
roadmap.
The
kind
of
long-term
pieces
are
just
more
data.
You
know
there.
There
are
things
that
that
we're
working
on
and
we
would
like
to
put
out
there
and
the
more
we
get
into
this
automation,
the
easier
it
becomes.
It's
just
that
manual
process
really
kind
of
limits,
how
much
we
can
put
out
and
how
often
so
yeah
I
mean
we
are
actually
kicking
off
a
project
in
another
week.
C
That
starts
laying
the
foundation
for
a
lot
of
this,
so
hopefully
more
to
come
very
soon
and
a
lot
of
enhancements
down
the
road.
So
any
feedback
from
from
the
community
is
welcome,
as
we
you
know,
start
to
develop
these
new
things.
B
I
know
everyone
will
be
excited
to
see
what's
to
come.
I
mean
it's
already
great
information
and
I
think
it's
in
a
great
format
right
now,
but
I
know
we'll
look
forward
to
that.
Another
question
we
have
is
about
the
arrest
data
set
if
a
person
isn't
arrested
at
the
crime
scene
but
arrested
after
the
fact,
maybe
at
their
residence,
is
that
documented
at
their
residence
or
is
it
just
documented
that
an
arrest
was
made
at
the
crime
scene.
C
That
is
actually
a
great
question,
so
it's
going
to
be
basically
on
whatever
the
the
arrest
location
was,
but
a
lot
of
our
our
arrest
data,
especially
the
xy
and
the
points
are,
are
slightly
offset
so
that
it
doesn't
fall
directly
on
the
location.
So
I
mean
that's
also
where
you
know
you
have
the
ends:
the
difference
between
an
incident
and
arrest.
You
know
kind
of.
As
you
mentioned,
the
incident
will
be
the
location
where
something
occurred
and
the
arrest
will
be.
You
know
where
we
made
the
arrest.
B
Thank
you
so
much
for
clarifying
that
another
question:
if
someone
has,
if
they
see
like
a
discrepancy
or
that
they
feel
they
notice
a
discrepancy
and
something
that's
uploaded
versus
what
they
have
observed
or
were
thought
had
happened?
Who
should
they
contact
or
what
are
the
steps
to
make
someone
aware
of
that.
C
Yep,
so
I
mean,
if
you
contact
our
our
public
information
team,
you
know
they'll
they'll,
get
it
rooted
to
us.
That's
always
a
really
good,
just
kind
of
common
point
of
contact,
and
they
will
definitely
afford
it
on
to
us,
and
you
know
I'll,
be
the
first
one
to
tell
you
that
there
is
a
very
human
element
involved
and
we're
not
perfect-
and
we
did
you
know
last
summer,
have
an
incident
to
where
we
did
post
some
data
on
e-citations
and
it
was
duplicating.
C
You
know
some
of
the
tickets
on
there,
and
so
the
numbers
were
actually
larger
than
what
they
should
have
been.
Someone
did
bring
it
to
our
attention.
We
corrected
it.
It
was
up
there
for
you
know
about
a
month
before
we
corrected
it,
and
it
just
so
happened
that
you
know
a
community
group
did
some
analysis
off
of
those
numbers
during
that
month
that
it
was
there,
and
so
it
was
a
little
bit
of
a
you
know,
a
learning
process
for
us-
and
I
know
that
you
know
that
group
was
was
aggravated.
C
B
And
I
I
think
one
more
question
would
be:
do
you
encourage
people
to
get
word
out
about
this?
I
know
that
we're
all
we're
able
to
participate
in
this
and
this
information
was
so
great
that
you
could
share.
How
would
you
like
us?
I
know
we
can
post
on
our
community
websites
through
nextdoor
and
facebook.
B
A
link
is
it?
Is
it
best
just
supposed
to
link
directly
to
the
pdi
site
or
what
yeah.
C
Yeah,
I
think
it's
definitely
easier
just
to
put
that
charleston-sc.gov
forward.
Slash
pdi.
You
know
just
that
that
initial
landing
site
that
short
url
it's
easy
to
remember
but
yeah
I
mean
definitely
tell
anyone
everyone.
You
know
whether
it
be
word
of
mouth
social
media.
Whatever
it
is,
I
mean
it
is
a
resource
that
you
know.
We
take
a
lot
of
pride
in
and
a
lot
of
work
and
effort
goes
in
to
make
sure
that
information
gets
gets.
Put
there.
So
definitely
the
more
people
that
use
it,
see
it
and
ask
questions.
B
Well,
thank
you
so
much
for
your
time,
and
this
was
a
great
presentation
if.
B
Additional
questions
really
quick,
please
submit
them.
I
know
we
got
through
quite
a
few
of
them,
but
if
you
have
any
additional
ones,
you
can
submit
them
now
or,
if
not,
please
submit
them
to
us
and
we
can
always
get
this
answered
for
you
and
send
them
to
the
appropriate
person,
but
I'll
turn
it
back
also
over
to
paul
just
to
say
again
our
thank
you
to
everyone
who
did
this,
but
y'all
did
an
excellent
job,
looking
lieutenant
sofkeld
and
david
crosby.
So
thank
you
both
for
your
time
tonight.
C
A
C
A
Agreed,
thank
you
very
much,
emily
and
david,
and
you
know
anybody
on
the
call
or
anybody
else
out
there
if
you're,
reaching
out,
if
you'd
like
to
get
a
copy
of
the
deck
just
reach
out
to
us
through
our
contact
information,
and
we
can
send
you
a
copy,
this
deck,
that
you
know
you
can
use
for
your
neighborhood
meetings
or
anything
else
you
want
to
do
you
know
everything
we're
doing
is
transparent.