How often do patrols pass by my house?

URNA monitors the patrol cars via a GPS tracking system. Our historical experience is that the patrols pass by almost every house in the patrol area between several times each patrol day.The exact number depends on the day and also of course our current funding levels for the patrols. More members would allow expanded coverage hours – a worthy goal.

Patrol hours vary by day with some randomness to get the best bang for the buck in our contracted hours. Additionally, the patrol officers will often change up their strategy for covering the areas on a daily basis. Our coverage area is quite large, so they may hang out in one sector for an hour and move to adjacent ones with that frequency, but they may also drive around to cover the whole area more quickly. The patrol officer are experts at getting the most out of the time and changing things up to keep the bad guys guessing.

UPDATE: July 2017: Patrol logs are accessible with our new service from BAY ALARM for URNA FULL MEMBERS.

Are the patrol officers armed?

No. URNA believes the primary purpose of the patrols is deterrence. We especially do not ever want to increase the risk of a firearm being discharged within lower Rockridge. Matters that require firearms should be handled by the police. Our contracted security officers may carry mace or batons only if they are licensed to do so. For additional information, please read our engagement policy.

What are the rules of enagagement with potential criminals?

Patrol officers generally will not physically intervene, but instead will provide a visual presence and call the police when appropriate. If they witness any portion of a crime, patrol officers will provide eyewitness and other evidence to the police as well. That said, if there is a crime in progress where a person is being harmed or facing imminent harm, the patrol officer may choose to intervene physically if in their judgment they feel it is safe to do so.

How will the patrols interact with residents and visitors?

URNA intends for patrol officers to be part of the community. As such, we expect them to converse with members of the community on their daily rounds. Please introduce yourselves and talk with them as well. If there is a surge in crime activity on your street, please call them and ask them to come and stop so you and your neighbors can talk with them. We send the name of the patrol officer(s) to members via our member emails. And the patrol company dispatch has a list of active members as well.

Are the patrols effective?

URNA does not have existing data analysis for our area at this time, however we do encourage you to look at OPD crime stats that are regularly published via the NextDoor website.

Of course it is always hard to determine when a patrol deters a crime since it does not happen, but we’ve heard anecdotally that crime rates have lowered in other neighborhoods that started patrols

Additionally, Paul Liu, Ph.D., an economist and one of the organizers of Safer Rockridge – which covers Lower Rockridge area along College Ave- analyzed the impact of the patrols on burglaries and robberies in Rockridge with Bayesian statistical modeling using over seven years of Oakland-wide, historical data through October 2014. He estimates that burglaries and robberies were down by 30% after initiation of the patrols, relative to what they would have been absent the patrols. He also found no evidence to suggest that the patrols have caused a spill-over effect in neighborhoods adjacent to Rockridge. See the full report at http://goo.gl/zY27Z4.

How does URNA address racial profiling?

Racial profiling is typically an issue that arises with police departments using racial or religious bias in exercising their discretionary right to detail citizens. Since our contracted patrols do not stop or detain people, however, the issue of racial profiling doesn’t arise. Nontheless, it is our policy that the URNA safety patrols are prohibited from engaging in racial or other discriminatory profiling.