Crime data transparency Ranking - 50 US Cities
SpotCrime has graded 50 US cities on how transparent they are with crime data.
A 2 grade is an ‘A+, you are awesome!’ - the city is open with their crime data, meaning it follows this criteria:
Out of these 50 cities, we gave 7 cities a 0 grade. All but one of those 7 cities (New York) use a proprietary vendor who restricts access to the public data. Some of these cities give data to two vendors, but restrict access to everyone else. Las Vegas even has an open data portal, but no crime data is provided.
Here are the 7 cities with a 0 grade:
New York, NY
San Jose, CA
El Paso, TX
Las Vegas, NV
Long Beach, CA
Colorado Springs, CO
Omaha, NE
We’ve been following some recent legislation being put into place in New York that (looks like) it will require the NYPD to release crime data! And, in San Jose, we’ve found that there has been a budget set aside to implement an open data policy. Let’s hope this will include crime data too.
Want to get a sense of where your police department ranks? Send an us inquiry for a free review.
Finally, don’t forget to check out these open data resources and share them with your city:
Civic Commons Open Data Guidelines
8 principles of Open Governemnt Data
opengovernmentinitiative.org
Data as a Public Good
Municipal Open Data Policies
- Fair and equal access to the data; there are no restrictions on use or sharing of the information
- It’s free; no registrations, licenses, fees, etc are associated with the information
- It’s available in machine readable format or a format capable of automating
- Information is timely and up to date
A 1 grade is an ‘OK, but you can do better’ - the city may publish some sort of crime data feed, but it’s:
Below is the grade sheet. Where does your city stand in regards to open data?
In cities like Los Angeles, San Antonio, and San Diego (to name a few), SpotCrime can proudly say that we had a hand in keeping open or creating a public crime data feed when the police agency moved to a proprietary system.
- Incomplete (missing part of a location, missing time, etc)
- Out of date (In some cases up to date information is only given to a preferred vendor and everyone else has to wait up to a week to receive similar information)
- The information is in a really hard to read format (.pdf, fax, snail mail, word doc)
Below is the grade sheet. Where does your city stand in regards to open data?
City
|
State
|
Grade
|
New York
|
New York
|
0
|
Los Angeles
|
California
|
2
|
Chicago
|
Illinois
|
2
|
Houston
|
Texas
|
2
|
Philadelphia
|
Pennsylvania
|
2
|
Phoenix
|
Arizona
|
1
|
San Antonio
|
Texas
|
2
|
San Diego
|
California
|
1
|
Dallas
|
Texas
|
2
|
San Jose
|
California
|
0
|
Austin
|
Texas
|
2
|
Jacksonville
|
Florida
|
1
|
Indianapolis
|
Indiana
|
1
|
San Francisco
|
California
|
2
|
Columbus
|
Ohio
|
2
|
Fort Worth
|
Texas
|
1
|
Charlotte
|
North Carolina
|
1
|
Detroit
|
Michigan
|
1
|
El Paso
|
Texas
|
0
|
Memphis
|
Tennessee
|
1
|
Boston
|
Massachusetts
|
1
|
Seattle
|
Washington
|
2
|
Denver
|
Colorado
|
2
|
Washington
|
DC
|
2
|
Nashville
|
Tennessee
|
2
|
Baltimore
|
Maryland
|
1
|
Louisville
|
Kentucky
|
2
|
Portland
|
Oregon
|
2
|
Oklahoma City
|
Oklahoma
|
1
|
Milwaukee
|
Wisconsin
|
2
|
Las Vegas
|
Nevada
|
0
|
Albuquerque
|
New Mexico
|
1
|
Tucson
|
Arizona
|
1
|
Fresno
|
California
|
1
|
Sacramento
|
California
|
2
|
Long Beach
|
California
|
0
|
Kansas City
|
Missouri
|
2
|
Mesa
|
Arizona
|
1
|
Virginia Beach
|
Virginia
|
1
|
Atlanta
|
Georgia
|
1
|
Colorado Springs
|
Colorado
|
0
|
Raleigh
|
North Carolina
|
2
|
Omaha
|
Nebraska
|
0
|
Miami
|
Florida
|
2
|
Oakland
|
California
|
2
|
Tulsa
|
Oklahoma
|
2
|
Minneapolis
|
Minnesota
|
1
|
Cleveland
|
Ohio
|
1
|
Wichita
|
Kansas
|
2
|
Out of these 50 cities, we gave 7 cities a 0 grade. All but one of those 7 cities (New York) use a proprietary vendor who restricts access to the public data. Some of these cities give data to two vendors, but restrict access to everyone else. Las Vegas even has an open data portal, but no crime data is provided.
Here are the 7 cities with a 0 grade:
New York, NY
San Jose, CA
El Paso, TX
Las Vegas, NV
Long Beach, CA
Colorado Springs, CO
Omaha, NE
We’ve been following some recent legislation being put into place in New York that (looks like) it will require the NYPD to release crime data! And, in San Jose, we’ve found that there has been a budget set aside to implement an open data policy. Let’s hope this will include crime data too.
Want to get a sense of where your police department ranks? Send an us inquiry for a free review.
Finally, don’t forget to check out these open data resources and share them with your city:
Civic Commons Open Data Guidelines
8 principles of Open Governemnt Data
opengovernmentinitiative.org
Data as a Public Good
Municipal Open Data Policies
Comments
http://spotcrimecrimereports.wordpress.com/2014/06/26/indianapolis-moves-to-one-of-the-least-transparent-cities-in-the-us-for-crime-data/