Glendale Community Policing Meeting Calendar

Public Safety Arizona 3 Minutes Read ยท published February 10, 2026 Flag of Arizona

Glendale, Arizona residents can find community policing meeting schedules and neighborhood engagement events using official city tools and the Glendale Police Department's community pages. This guide explains where schedules are posted, how to confirm dates and locations, how to request a police presentation or meeting, and how to report issues discovered at or between meetings. Use the official city calendar and police community pages for authoritative times and last-minute changes, and follow the steps below to attend or request outreach for your neighborhood.

Where to find meeting schedules

  • Check the City of Glendale official calendar for public events and meeting listings: City of Glendale Calendar[1]
  • Visit the Glendale Police Department community policing page for neighborhood meeting announcements, liaison contacts, and program descriptions: Glendale Police - Community Policing[2]
  • For rules that may affect public meetings, consult the City of Glendale Code of Ordinances and event permitting information: Glendale Code of Ordinances[3]
Always confirm meeting times on the official calendar within 48 hours before attending.

Penalties & Enforcement

The Glendale Police Department enforces public-safety rules at city meetings and events. Specific fines or penalties tied directly to attending or posting community policing meetings are not listed on the event or community-policing pages cited above; where numeric fines or fee schedules exist they appear in the municipal code or specific permit sections cited below.

  • Typical enforcer: Glendale Police Department and City Code Enforcement acting under the City of Glendale ordinances.[3]
  • Fine amounts: not specified on the cited community pages; consult the municipal code for particular sections and fines.[3]
  • Escalation: the cited pages do not list first/repeat ranges; appeal or escalation procedures reference standard municipal code enforcement and court processes.[3]
  • Inspection and complaint pathways: report on-duty issues to Glendale Police non-emergency dispatch or the listed community policing contacts on the police page.[2]
  • Non-monetary sanctions: orders to vacate, trespass warnings, or criminal charges may be used where conduct violates law; specifics depend on the ordinance or criminal code section enforced.
If you receive a citation related to a meeting or event, check the municipal code section cited on the citation for fines and appeal deadlines.

Applications & Forms

The Glendale Police community pages describe outreach and neighborhood programs but do not publish a specific public "meeting schedule request" form on the cited page; to request a presentation or meeting use the contact routes listed on the police community page or the city events contact on the city calendar listing.[2]

FAQ

How do I find the next neighborhood community policing meeting in Glendale?
Check the City of Glendale official calendar and the Glendale Police Department community policing page for posted meeting dates and locations; contact the police community liaison for confirmations.[1][2]
Can I request a police presentation for my block or HOA?
Yes. Contact the Glendale Police Department community policing contacts listed on the department page to request a presentation; no single public form is published on that page.[2]
What if a meeting location changes at short notice?
Verify meeting details on the city calendar and contact the police liaison or event organizer; official pages are the authoritative source for last-minute changes.[1][2]

How-To

  1. Open the City of Glendale calendar and filter by "Police" or "Community" events to locate posted meetings.[1]
  2. Visit the Glendale Police Department community policing page to read program descriptions and find liaison contact information.[2]
  3. Call or email the listed community policing contact to confirm time, place, accessibility needs, or to request a neighborhood visit.
  4. If you plan to host a public meeting requiring city space or permits, consult the municipal code and events permit guidance before booking a facility.[3]

Key Takeaways

  • Use the City calendar and Glendale Police community page as primary sources for meeting times and contacts.
  • Confirm meetings by contacting the police liaison at least 48 hours before the event.

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] City of Glendale Calendar
  2. [2] Glendale Police - Community Policing
  3. [3] Glendale Code of Ordinances (Municode)