Seattle Police to stop responding to alarm calls amid depleted resources

(The Center Square) – Starting next month, the Seattle Police Department will not dispatch officers to calls from alarm companies unless there is enough evidence of a person attempting to break into property.

Interim Seattle Police Chief Sue Rahr announced the new policy change on Sept. 13 in a letter sent to alarm companies

According to Rahr, the Seattle 911 Center receives approximately 13,000 residential and commercial burglary alarm calls from alarm monitoring companies each year. However, the majority of those calls are the result of an accidental sensor trip by a homeowner or employee of a business.

Other calls are a result of old and failing alarm sensor equipment.

Rahr pointed to data from 2023 that showed out of 13,000 alarm calls, less than 4% were confirmed to have a crime associated with them that resulted in an arrest or a report being written.

The policy change will go into effect on Oct. 1.

Any calls to the SPD regarding alarm activations will have to include supporting evidence such as audio, video, panic alarms or eyewitness evidence of a person illegally entering a property in order for an officer to be dispatched to the scene.

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