Track resident concerns across neighborhoods, not just the issues already moving through city hall.
See priorities
Resident-first civic map
What is Jacksonville asking for and is the city paying attention?
Local & Vocal starts with what residents need most. We gather neighborhood requests, turn them into visible citywide priorities, and compare those priorities to public spending, official action, and the pace of real response.
Track the issues residents keep raising most often and see which concerns are shaping the public conversation.
View concernsHow it works
One place to see what residents need, what the city is doing, and where the money goes.
Local and Vocal exists to make civic life clearer, more transparent, and more connected to the people it is meant to serve. We start by gathering public need first: the concerns, frustrations, and repeated requests that residents raise block by block.
From there, we organize those requests into visible city priorities, compare them to spending patterns and public actions, and help neighbors see whether city response is actually matching public need.
The goal is simple: make it easier for residents, organizers, and local partners to move from scattered frustration to shared evidence, clear priorities, and public accountability.
Explore community priorities
Top community priorities
What residents keep asking for in Jacksonville right now.
Demo mode: these priority counts and alignment notes are sample data while resident intake and budget feeds are being connected.
Safer streets, slower traffic, and crosswalks people can trust
214 resident requests across Arlington, Springfield, the Northside, and the urban core.
See public concernsFlooding, standing water, and storm response
168 requests tied to repeat flood zones, blocked drains, and neighborhood infrastructure complaints.
See city responseKeep families housed and stabilize rising rent pressure
143 requests connect eviction prevention, code enforcement, and affordable repair needs.
Hear neighborsRestore dependable bus frequency and late service
119 requests describe missed connections, unsafe wait times, and routes that stop too early.
See public concernsWhat this platform tracks
Everything needed to move from scattered requests to public accountability.
Resident requests
Collect concerns by issue, neighborhood, and frequency so priorities begin with lived reality.
Priority clustering
Group repeated requests into citywide themes like street safety, housing stability, or drainage.
Neighborhood spread
See whether an issue is isolated to one corridor or showing up across multiple parts of the city.
Concern mapping
Connect repeated resident concerns to neighborhoods, departments, projects, and the public decisions tied to them.
City response tracking
Follow hearings, votes, notices, and project updates to see whether action matches public demand.
Organizing pathways
Turn visibility into next steps: testify, submit evidence, show up to meetings, or support a local push.
Public concerns
The issues residents keep returning to across the city.
Demo mode: these concern clusters are sample priorities for the prototype while live resident intake and city issue data are being connected.
Residents are asking for safer streets, more reliable transit, and stronger connections between neighborhoods
People want visible safety, faster response, and stronger prevention in the places that feel most exposed
Neighbors want clearer communication, more follow-through, and proof that public input is actually shaping decisions
Neighborhood voices
The public story should sound like the people who live there.
"If the city says safety matters, you should be able to see whether our corridor actually moved up the list or just got talked about."
Danielle M. Arlington parent"We hear about big projects, but neighbors mostly want to know why the same flooding keeps happening on the same streets."
Marcus T. Northside resident"Transit becomes a city priority the moment enough working people can show that the gaps are repeated, visible, and hurting daily life."
Ana R. Westside bus riderCity response
What the city appears to be doing once a public issue becomes visible.
Street safety review
Resident complaints and crash concerns can be tied to corridor studies, lighting requests, and public works review windows.
Drainage follow-up
Repeated flooding issues should connect to drainage maintenance schedules, capital work, and neighborhood trouble spots.
Transit accountability
Service gaps should connect to route discussions, board meetings, public comment dates, and any restoration commitments.
Supporting civic calendar
Official meetings and election dates that help explain what happens next.
Sources: Duval County Elections, Jacksonville City Council, and a Google Civic-ready adapter layer for future address-based election lookups. This calendar is meant to connect public priorities to official moments where action, spending, or testimony can be tracked.
2026 Qualifying for April Qualifying Candidates
Official candidate qualifying period listed by Duval County Elections.
Duval County ElectionsCity Council Special Committee on Duval DOGE
Official Jacksonville City Council special committee meeting.
Council ChamberFlorida Primary Election Day
Official 2026 Florida primary election day listed by Duval County Elections.
Countywide Polling LocationsVoter Registration Deadline for the General Election
Official voter registration deadline for the 2026 general election.
Duval County ElectionsVoting System Demo at Brooks Rehabilitation
Official Duval County Elections voting system demo and voter education event.
Brooks RehabilitationNaturalization
Official civic outreach event listed by Duval County Elections.
Federal Courthouse AreaSubmit a local issue
Start with what residents are actually asking for.
Use this intake to capture neighborhood concerns, repeated complaints, public evidence, and the kind of city response residents want to see. This is the front door for building a resident-first priority map.