“Jim wasn’t an expert when he started. He just kept coming back. That’s the whole thing.”
Four commissioners present — Geitner (Chair), Nelson (Vice Chair), Williams, Applegate. Wysong excused. The consent calendar passed 4–0 without discussion. No public comment. The substantive item was the proclamation for National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week.
Sheriff Joseph Roybal brought a group of dispatchers up to the dais. He called them the first first responders — because when a deputy or firefighter is in trouble, they call too, and someone has to answer.
The numbers he put on the record: 7.29-second average 911 answer time. 285,000 calls for service in 2025. Nearly 90% answered within 15 seconds. Medical guidance delivered on 13,000+ calls. Ten lives saved. Eleven babies delivered through phone calls.
Dispatchers train for nearly a full year before they take calls on their own — longer than deputy training, the Sheriff noted. The Regional Communications Center is now the largest and most technologically advanced dispatch center in Colorado. A new E911 system automatically texts back about 800 dropped or abandoned wireless calls every year, no dispatcher action needed.
Chair Geitner closed the proclamation with a story from the day before: a 911 call from a five-year-old. Both parents gone. The dispatcher stayed calm. Kept the child calm. Stayed with her until help arrived. That’s the job. 285,000 times a year.
Quick note before we move on. The AI tool we ran the meeting through consistently called him “Sheriff Weibull.” Which would be a fine name, except the Weibull distribution is the probability function reliability engineers use to model failure rates and response times — exactly what Roybal was about to present statistics on. The transcription tool fell into the data it was transcribing. The most committed bit a piece of software has ever done. Anyway. Roybal.
Almost everyone mixes this up. So while we’re here:
Sheriff is a county-level position, elected by voters. One per county. Runs the jail and countywide law enforcement. Joseph Roybal is the El Paso County sheriff.
Police chief is a city-level position, appointed by the mayor. One per city. Runs city-limits law enforcement only. Adrian Vasquez is the Colorado Springs police chief.
Different uniforms, different jobs, different chains of command. Both answer 911. Both stood alongside the same dispatchers that week.
Crime trends down across the board. Motor vehicle theft -42% (2023→2025). Murders -28%. 2026 YTD homicides roughly 80% lower than 2025. Story Seed Studios created a dashboard from the Police trending, but there are gaps.
Drone program now at 7 locations, averaging 36 flights per day — third in the nation. Drones arrive before officers about 62% of the time, and 11,000 minutes of officer time were saved last year through drone first-response.
On the 911 side — answer times jumped from 67% to 86% within 20 seconds. Priority-one response time dropped from 14:46 to 11:34 — three minutes faster on the worst calls. Same dispatchers Sheriff Roybal had just stood with at the county dais. Two governments, same praise, same week.
Organization of Westside Neighbors. Founded 1978. About 60 people in folding chairs. Councilwoman Brandy Williams, city staff, and the specific kind of resident who shows up to a Wednesday-night meeting because they want to know what’s happening on their street.
The Colorado Avenue corridor project launched at this meeting. Road-diet mechanics, funding mix, timeline. We cover the funding side fully in 011B — The Money, and the road safety plan context in 011C — The Systems. Credit where due: the actual presentation was made by Gail Sturdivant, the City Engineer. Williams was there; Sturdivant presented.
Porta potties came up. Trail safety came up. Small, specific, fixable things. The bridge between the complaint and the outcome is usually somebody picking up the phone and asking the right department.
Pat Rigdon walks the blocks. His team is the reason downtown sidewalks look the way they do. He came to the town hall with an ask that was almost disarmingly simple: keep calling, keep reporting, keep naming specific corners.
He’s working with 24,500 documented cleanup sites — the City’s own number, pulled from the Public Works tracking system. We filed a CORA this week asking for the underlying dataset and the methodology CSPD uses to generate it. If you want to help Pat directly: walk a block, note what’s wrong, report it. He’ll route it.
The Planning Commission met, handled two drainage-study setups (we cover those in 011C), and then stopped for a tribute to Jim Egbert.
Jim joined the commission October 2012. He was elected Chair in 2017. He stepped down in May 2019. He passed this April from ALS. He wasn’t a planner by training. He was a neighbor who kept showing up. Which is, it turns out, most of what this kind of work asks of you.
“Last week was a week. In a good way. Quiet on the surface, busy underneath. Four different rooms, four different groups of people doing the actual work of running a place.”
2025
2025
through phone calls
arrival rate
2023→2025
cleanup sites
The speeches behind these statistics — the Mayor’s briefing, Sheriff Roybal at the dais, Pat Rigdon’s ask — are genuinely good. Warm, specific, human. We’re not trying to replace them.
cheetochopsticks.com is just where we’re putting the underlying numbers together for data-driven reference — so you can verify a figure, layer it against other data, or look at it on your own schedule. It’s a work in progress. There are gaps. We’ll keep filling them.
Speeches and spreadsheets do different work. This show tries to help both exist.
Chair Carrie Geitner · District 2 · 2026 Chair
Vice Chair Lauren Nelson · District 5
Commissioner Holly Williams · District 1 · Term-limited final year
Commissioner Bill Wysong · District 3 · Excused April 14
Commissioner Cory Applegate · District 4
Sheriff Joseph Roybal · El Paso County
Mayor Yemi Mobolade · City of Colorado Springs
Police Chief Adrian Vasquez · Colorado Springs
City Engineer Gail Sturdivant · Presented Colorado Avenue at the OWN town hall
Councilwoman Brandy Williams · West Side
Pat Rigdon · Downtown Partnership · Clean & Safe program
Jim Egbert · Planning Commission · In memoriam. Joined October 2012. Elected Chair 2017. Stepped down May 2019. Passed April 2026 from ALS.
- BOCC: Roybal brought the dispatchers. 7.29s · 285K calls · 10 lives · 11 babies. Geitner’s five-year-old story closed it.
- Mayor: Drones + dispatch gains. MVT -42%, murders -28%, 2026 homicides -80% YoY, priority-1 response -3 minutes.
- OWN town hall: 48 years in. Colorado Avenue launching. Porta potties, trails, and the specific texture of civic life.
- Pat Rigdon: 24,500 sites. His ask = keep calling. We filed a CORA. Same email works for you.
- Planning Commission: 12 minutes. Honored Jim Egbert. Then moved on, which is how he would have wanted it.
- Tomorrow: 011B — The Money. Friday: 011C — The Systems.
1 — The Dispatchers
Tuesday morning, April 14th. Centennial Hall. Four commissioners present (Wysong excused). Sheriff Joseph Roybal stood at the dais with his 911 dispatchers and put real numbers on the record — 7.29-second average answer time, 285,000 calls, 13,000 medical-guidance calls, ten lives saved, eleven babies delivered through phone calls. Chair Geitner closed with one specific story: a five-year-old who called 911 after both parents were killed. The dispatcher stayed with her. That’s the job, 285,000 times a year.
2 — Sheriff vs. Police Chief
One sheriff per county (elected, county-wide, runs the jail). One police chief per city (appointed by mayor, city-only). Roybal is the EPC sheriff. Vasquez is the Colorado Springs police chief. Different uniforms, different jobs, different chains of command. Almost everyone mixes this up — including us, regularly.
3 — The Mayor’s Mini State of the City
Crime trends down across the board. Motor vehicle theft -42% (2023→2025). Murders -28%. Year-to-date 2026 homicides ~80% lower than 2025. Drone program now at 7 locations averaging 36 flights/day — third in the nation. About 62% of the time the drone arrives before officers do. 11,000 minutes of officer time saved last year. 911 answer times jumped from 67% to 86% within 20 seconds. Priority-one response time dropped from 14:46 to 11:34 — three minutes faster on the worst calls. The Mayor thanked Chief Vasquez and the same dispatchers Roybal had just stood with. Two governments, same praise, same week.
4 — The West Side Town Hall
Councilwoman Brandy Williams + city staff + about 60 neighbors in folding chairs. OWN has been doing this since 1978. The Colorado Avenue corridor is launching with federal and PPRTA money (full funding breakdown in 011B). The actual project announcement was made by Gail Sturdivant, the City Engineer. Williams was there; Sturdivant presented. Credit where it’s due.
5 — Pat Rigdon & the Clean & Safe Program
Pat Rigdon runs Clean & Safe for the Downtown Partnership. He asked neighbors for specifics — a corner, an address, a time of day. His team works from 24,500 documented cleanup sites. Part of his funding comes from the City’s marijuana revenue allocation ($700K to Downtown Partnership in the most recent cycle). We cover that money trail in 011B. For tonight: if you see something specific, tell him specifically. That’s the ask.
6 — Jim Egbert
Planning Commission, twelve minutes, then a pause. Jim joined the commission in October 2012. He was elected Chair in 2017. He stepped down in May 2019. He passed this April from ALS. He wasn’t a planner when he started. He just kept coming back.
Tomorrow — the money side of the same week. County Q4 budget, the Douglas Adams 42-million-dollar joke that’s also real, the Mayor’s $31M cumulative savings target, the marijuana-revenue / Florida-Lottery substitution effect, and the Colorado Avenue funding breakdown (federal grant + PPRTA, minimal city general fund).