The City of Knoxville’s Call 311 Center celebrates its third
anniversary, more than 600,000 calls after it began operations on the
morning of May 5, 2005, by answering calls to a single city department.
Today the office’s seven-member staff handles non-emergency calls
for all the city’s departments, something it took nearly 20
people across city government to do before the 311 System was
established.
Instituting a 311 System was one of Mayor Bill Haslam’s goals during his first campaign for mayor in 2003.
He wanted Call 311 to essentially be the city’s customer service
center where Knoxville residents could call a single number to report a
problem or get information about city services.
“It has exceeded our expectations both in the numbers of users
and their satisfaction and in terms of the data that we get from those
calls,” Haslam said. “It has made it easier for people to
contact us, it’s made it easier to get residents’ requests
to the right departments and it’s made it easier for us to act on
those requests.”
“So it has been a great source of information about city services
and I couldn’t be more pleased about how well it has
worked,” he added. “The 311 staff does a great job and they
are a wonderful asset for the city.”
The 311 Center’s motto is “One Number. One Call” and it provides a direct line of access to city government.
“We get everything, complaints about potholes, calls about
ordinance violations like overgrown lots,” said 311 Director Russ
Jensen, “questions about traffic tickets, about softball
schedules, anything you can think of that has to do with the city
government.”
The 311 service agents take calls for departments ranging from Public
Service and Parks and Recreation to Engineering and Community
Development.
Typically, if the call involves a question, the 311 service
representatives provide the requested information, usually very quickly.
If the agent doesn’t know the answer the 311 software includes an
advanced search engine so they can find it and the caller doesn’t
have to go elsewhere for an answer.
If the caller has a service request the 311 staffer enters it into the
city’s advanced tracking system and submits it to the proper
department.
Since all requests are assigned a tracking number the caller can keep up with the status of his or her request.
In addition to Jensen, the director, there are six customer service
agents in the Call 311 Center including, Chris Coyle, Shawanna Tipton,
Rebecca Hill, Cheri Hollifield, Jay McCrae and Denise Johnson.
Most have been with the office since that first day.
“The thing that impresses me most about this group is their
ability to absorb what everyone (in the city) does,” Jensen said.
“They have become experts on many topics and they aren’t afraid to answer any question.”
He said surveys of callers indicate that more than 90 percent are happy with the service they received from the staff.
The average call is answered in 18 seconds and the calls last an average of one minute and 20 seconds.
The 311 system can also provide city departments with data that can be used to better plan and provide services.
That’s because the system generates reports about the volume and
types of services citizens are requesting and in what areas. It also
allows the city to identify chronic problems and indicates how various
departments are responding to those needs.
“From strictly a service perspective point of view it has been
better than what we imagined,” Jensen said. “I would still
like us to use the data more in day-to-day management, and I think we
will as we go along.”
For more information about 311 please call Russ Jensen at 215-2066.




