The Seattle Police Department is launching a permanent Neighbourhood Resource Officer programme at Magnuson Park starting 8 April, placing dedicated officers on foot and bicycle patrols in and around the park to build community relationships and address public safety concerns before they escalate.
The programme is grounded in research showing that foot patrols improve neighbourhood safety outcomes and is designed to prioritise community engagement over enforcement. Officers will get to know residents, visitors, employees, and small business owners in the area, working to identify and resolve issues early. SPD Chief Shon Barnes said the initiative reflects a direct response to what the community has been asking for. “In my experience, police officers do their best work when they work in smaller areas and have responsibility for addressing neighbours’ concerns and problems,” Barnes said. “I look forward to having more NROs as we hire more officers this year.”

The permanent programme follows a 90-day pilot conducted last summer in which two officers worked 10-hour shifts at Magnuson Park. The results were notable. Calls to 911 from community members fell 4%, property crimes dropped 9%, and the two officers were directly responsible for 64% of all arrests made in the area during the pilot period. On the first day of the pilot, the officers recovered a firearm from an individual. They later made an arrest in a homicide case, a development SPD credited to relationships the officers had built within the community during their patrols.
District 4 Councilmember Maritza Rivera, who had pushed for increased officer presence in the area, said she fully supports making the programme permanent. “Last summer, we saw positive, concrete results from the pilot,” Rivera said. “Chief Barnes and North Precinct Captain George Davisson have been great partners.”
SPD said it plans to expand the Neighbourhood Resource Officer programme to two additional locations later this year as staffing levels increase. Little Saigon and Downtown along 3rd Avenue are the next targeted areas, both described by the department as busy with workers, tourists, and community members. The department said it gained 94 net new officers last year and is maintaining similar recruitment momentum in 2026.



