Park Maintenance Scores

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Recreation and Parks Department

The Controller’s Office and the Recreation and Parks Department (RPD) evaluate City parks every year. Parks are evaluated using maintenance standards for several categories of park features, like lawns, children's play areas, restrooms, outdoor courts, or athletic fields. Each feature has specific standards to meet on cleanliness, working equipment, landscaping, and other measures of maintenance and appearance. 

These standards measure the City's ability to provide parks that are clean, safe, and ready for use. The standards do not evaluate the design of facilities or demand for amenities. These evaluations are not substitutes for professional assessment of structural integrity.

The evaluations produce scores for every City park. These scores are summarized in the dashboard below, which shows citywide trends, the highest and lowest scoring parks, changes in individual park scores over time, and park scores by supervisor district.

You can find more details, data, and dashboards on the progam's website.

AVERAGE CITYWIDE PARK MAINTENANCE SCORES

Click on the tabs at the bottom of the dashboard to navigate to the park scores.

 

How Performance is Measured

A park’s maintenance score is the percent of the applicable standards that are met. A perfect score of 100% would mean the park passed all applicable maintenance standards.

All supervisory and management staff at RPD and all staff in the City Performance Unit of the Controller’s Office perform park evaluations each year. On average, each park  is evaluated four times a year. RPD distributes quarterly reports of park maintenance scores for internal evaluation purposes. These reports are reviewed at Executive Staff and Parks & Open Spaces manager meetings. The Controller's Office reports summarized data and results for public use once a year.

San Francisco adopted its original park maintenance standards in FY2006. They were updated with new criteria beginning in FY2015. The revised standards build on the previous standards to provide greater clarity, reduce evaluator interpretation guesswork, and allow for deeper analyses of the results. The new standards were the results of two years of concerted interdepartmental effort, involving review and feedback by front-line custodial and gardener staff, as well as manager and administrator input. In FY2017, the standards were consolidated and streamlined to make them more consistent and objective. You can find the latest park maintenance standards here.

Additional Information

Data

Please visit DataSF for the scorecard data or to browse park evaluation data.