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Police and fire outline enforcement results and community safety programs as staffing falls for motor units
Summary
Phoenix Police and Fire updated the Vision 0 committee on targeted traffic enforcement, declines in motor officer staffing, bike rodeos and car-seat inspections funded by state grants, and emergency vehicle preemption systems.
Phoenix Police and Phoenix Fire briefed the Vision 0 Citizen Advisory Committee on enforcement results, public-safety outreach and training programs tied to traffic safety.
Lieutenant Chad Ryan of the Phoenix Police Department told the committee his unit has "currently 28 riding motors and 22 vehicular crimes detectives" and reported year-to-date figures (January–May 2025) for his unit: nearly 300 DUIs processed, over 300 arrests, almost 11,000 citations, about 195 commercial-vehicle inspections and "501 crash investigations." Ryan also described a targeted enforcement model that deploys radar trailers for data collection followed by a two-week enforcement deployment and a one-week follow-up; he said the approach produced notable declines in excessive-speed violations in several corridors (examples cited…
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