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Anoka County Public Safety Data System <br />• <br />Who is involved in this project? <br />The Anoka County Joint Law Enforcement <br />Council (JLEC) is a joint powers entity <br />comprised of all chief law enforcement officers, the sheriff, county <br />attorney, a fire chief, together with county commissioners and city <br />council members. The JLEC has a successful 40 -year track record of fostering and managing shared <br />criminal justice programs and consolidated services including major crimes investigation, a <br />consolidated police records system for all 11 law enforcement agencies, and a county -wide dispatch <br />center. For this project, we are working together with the Anoka County Fire Protection Council as <br />well. <br />What is the project? <br />The JLEC is seeking to update the public safety records and information <br />systems. To fund this project, we are seeking to revise the bonding authority <br />granted to the Anoka County Board for the implementation of 800 mhz radio <br />communications in 2002 so that the same mechanism can fund future <br />countywide public safety initiatives. <br />The project currently in development would replace or upgrade several dated <br />critical public safety records and information service applications in the <br />communications /dispatch center, the police records system, fire service dispatch <br />and records systems, and jail records. The vision for the future of Anoka County's public safety <br />information systems is one of further consolidation and complete integration providing for seamless <br />collection, dissemination, archiving, and analysis of public safety data. We want the right people to <br />have the right data at the right time. <br />The JLEC and the Fire Prevention Council will be seeking other funding sources for this project <br />including grants, but we anticipate that bonding will be necessary. The JLEC has proposed <br />legislation, with County Board approval, to revise Minn. Stat. §383E.21 which permitted the tax for the <br />public safety levy for 800 mhz radio to appear on a separate line item on property tax statements. <br />This allows our citizens to know exactly where those tax dollars are being spent. <br />Why is the JLEC proposing this project? <br />Currently, public safety information systems in Anoka County are fragmented with <br />different systems being utilized by different disciplines. Call records in the 911 center <br />are not integrated with either police or fire records, requiring either cumbersome "work- <br />arounds" or manual re- keying of already entered data. The countywide law <br />enforcement records system is at the end of its Iifespan and does not provide records <br />management for fire or emergency management. Anoka County's jail records require <br />officers to handwrite data already entered into the police records system so that it may <br />be re -keyed into the jail records system. Each time data is transferred from one <br />system to the next, time is wasted and errors may be introduced. Additionally, because of errors in <br />Sour records across these multiple systems, Anoka County had the highest rate of suspense files in <br />the metro area in 2010, with 14% of our criminal records not being recorded properly due to data <br />errors. Metro counties with better integration of their systems have rates around 5 %. We are <br />concerned that we do not have accurate criminal history data as a result. <br />