Survey results were mixed regarding the status of the current boundaries, how the boundaries affect defined geographic areas, location of the stations and the need for realignment. The survey results also indicated that less that 13% of the telephone survey participants and 26% of the written survey respondents had never visited a police station. Of those who had visited one of the stations, the majority of these community members had attended community meetings. Further, those who visited a District station indicated that the stations were easy to find with the exception of Ingleside. The community was not uniformly convinced that the current alignment met the needs of the community. Survey results showed that only two of five respondents believed that the current alignment met the needs of the community while the remaining three of five either did not believe that the current alignment was meeting the community needs or had no opinion. Inquiries about changes in the current alignment were also mixed with 36% of respondents indicating that the district alignment needed changes, 44% believing changes were not needed and 20% of the responses did not know if the changes were needed. Finally, the community’s responses to inquiries about whether their neighborhoods were split by the District boundaries indicated a mixed perception of this issue. Almost half of the responses (47%) were uncertain about this issue. Yet, 56% of the respondents agreed that the District boundaries should be drawn in a manner that does not split neighborhoods