Precinct Patrol
Source: PDF pp. 697-698 ↗ · raw: 697 · 698
Breadcrumb: Service Area Summaries > Public Safety > Portland Police Bureau > Precinct Patrol
City of Portland Fiscal Year 2026-27 Proposed Budget Public Safety > Portland Police Bureau > Precinct Patrol Precinct Patrol Budget Revenues by Fund 2023-24 Actuals 2024-25 Actuals 2025-26 Revised Budget 2026-27 Proposed External Revenues $145,742 $2,014,065 $1,730,650 $1,731,000 General Fund $139,145 $303,693 $1,506,000 $1,700,000 Grants Fund $6,597 $1,710,371 $224,650 $31,000 Internal Revenues $98,584,293 $107,616,242 $117,802,992 $99,208,523 General Fund $98,595,892 $107,616,242 $117,802,992 $99,208,523 Grants Fund ($11,599) $0 $0 $0 Police Special Revenue $0 $0 $0 $0 Fund Grand Total $98,730,035 $109,630,307 $119,533,642 $100,939,523 Program Expenses by Major Object Program expenses only include personnel, internal materials and services, external materials and services, and capital. 2023-24 Actuals 2024-25 Actuals 2025-26 Revised Budget 2026-27 Proposed External Materials and $258,591 $216,025 $216,700 $162,950 Services Internal Materials and $8,036,761 $8,470,747 $7,252,397 $6,498,471 Services Personnel $87,682,459 $95,496,746 $110,812,124 $94,278,102 Grand Total $95,977,811 $104,183,517 $118,281,221 $100,939,523 Program Description and Goals The Precinct Patrol Program is responsible for the provision of basic police service across the City of Portland. When a citizen calls for police response, the services provided are most likely to be performed by personnel in this program. The primary responsibilities of the patrol program are to respond to emergency or non-emergency calls for service, conduct preliminary investigations, enforce traffic and criminal laws, provide a visible presence within the community, and participate in community events. 697
City of Portland Fiscal Year 2026-27 Proposed Budget Services 911 call response; preventive and direct patrol; investigations; arrests; citations; community partnerships and education facilitation Equity Impacts All officers are required to complete procedural justice, equity, and implicit bias training as part of the mandatory training curriculum. Program response is administered based on the assigned priority of each call; to that extent, any community or individual with ability to call for 9-1-1 response has equal opportunity to receive attention. Due to staffing shortages, members of the public are being encouraged to submit online reports. This presents a potential inequity, as it presumes literacy, ability, and internet and computer access. The Bureau attempts to mitigate potential disparate impacts in response to calls for service by educating the community and training its employees regarding implicit bias and procedural justice. Changes to Program The Neighborhood Response program offer has been moved under Precinct Patrol. Neighborhood Response Teams are based within precincts and this move aligns budgetary structure with organizational structure. In addition, 137 Officer Trainees were moved from Precinct Patrol to the Training program offer. 698
Parent: Portland Police Bureau · PDF: pp. 697-698 ↗