Fire Chief Morgan reported the fire department had 62 runs last month with no structure fires and an average response time of 4 minutes, 4 seconds; year‑to‑date calls were projected at roughly 600–650. Morgan said the department performed an advanced bunker‑gear cleaning required by state statute and that one firefighter, Jace Rodriguez, began an 11‑month paramedic program with tuition support from a grant.
Morgan described training priorities including electrical vehicle fire response protocols, arson investigator continuing education, and a new peer support arrangement the department is building with neighboring fire chiefs to help manage behavioral health impacts after traumatic incidents.
Police Chief Pritchard reported 387 calls for service during the month, 10 offenses and three arrests; he said year‑to‑date arrest totals had already exceeded last year. Pritchard showed photos from a traffic stop in which officers seized methamphetamine, pipe paraphernalia and firearms. He introduced Officer Reinhart and said much of the drug enforcement comes from traffic stops for minor equipment violations such as a nonworking license plate light.
Pritchard also described a recent incident involving a person with mental‑health challenges who fled from a trespass call; officers deployed a taser during the apprehension and an officer was injured during the pursuit but has returned to duty.
Community events and other items
Pritchard noted the department will participate in a Roadhouse‑sponsored trunk‑or‑treat on Oct. 29 and promoted National Night Out information available on the Hollywood Park website. He also said the department had attended the district attorney's quarterly meeting and learned about case‑management challenges that affect evidence filing.
Public works and code enforcement updates
Director Kelly read a letter praising code officer Angela Perez for resolving neighborhood issues and reported 111 code initiations for the month, most related to trees and brush after heavy rains. Public works reported 280 man‑hours in drainage and grounds, 200 hours in facilities maintenance, and 43 hours on roads and bridges for the reporting month. Kelly said two of three water fountains at Memorial Park are operational and the third is awaiting concrete work for installation.
Ending
Council thanked chiefs and staff for the reports and for community outreach; chiefs said they will continue training, tracking response times and building peer support for first‑responders.