8085 University Ave, La Mesa, CA 91942
Thanks to Proposition D, a bond issue approved by La Mesans in 2004, the Police Department moved into a…More 45,000-square-foot, $20 million headquarters in September 2010.</p> <p>Police Chief Al Lanning oversees a force of 68 sworn officers, 30 non-sworn personnel and 50-60 members of the RSVP, or Retired Senior Volunteer Patrol, and other volunteers. </p> <p>The Police Department offers an SRO (school resource officer) for elementary and middle schools in La Mesa and assigns a full-time SRO to Helix Charter High School.</p> <p>The department's website links to My Neighborhood Update, a Google Maps-based display of reported incidents in La Mesa.</p> <p>Police also help with animal control, and promote Neighborhood Watch and Kidz Watch, a free safety academy for children 6-11. In addition, the Crime Free Multi-Housing crime-prevention program targets La Mesa apartment complexes.</p>
8181 Allison Ave, La Mesa, CA 91942
The La Mesa Police Department is a full-service police department that services area residents. It offers a broad range…More of services including protection and crime solving. Call the number provided for more information, but be sure to call 911 in an emergency.
8130 Allison Ave, La Mesa, CA 91942
La Mesa was incorporated by 700-plus citizens on February 16, 1912, growing out of La Mesa Springs. Throughout 2011,…More the city and its La Mesa Centennial Committee will hold events as part of a yearlong countdown. The civic center on Allison Avenue, including La Mesa administrative offices, opened in 1958.</p> <p>City offices now serve a population of about 57,000 residents in a nine-square-mile area between San Diego to the west, El Cajon to the east and Mt. Helix, Casa de Oro and Spring Valley to the south. Money from Proposition D bonds of 2004 provided a new police station, renovated fire station and new La Mesa branch library of the county system.</p> <p>La Mesa is a general law city with a council-manager form of government. The five-member City Council, elected at large, decides policy, and the city manager carries out policy, with help from a 2010-2011 budget of $122.4 million.</p> <p>As the gateway to East County, La Mesa is bisected by three major freeways and two trolley lines, and hosts five trolley stations. Most public schools are in the La Mesa-Spring Valley School District or the Grossmont Union High School District. The city manages 14 public parks, and shares some roles with the large Harry Griffen Park on the El Cajon border.</p> <p>La Mesa's crime rate in 2009 was touted as being the lowest since 1967. The city's general plan—a blueprint for growth and development that governs everything from traffic and housing mixes to noise, safety and historic presevation—will be revised in 2011, with citizen feedback welcomed.</p>