From traffic complaints to emergency calls, Bronxville police responded to more than 3,000 incidents last year — with officers arriving in just over two minutes on average.

The numbers come from a summary of the department’s 2025 annual report released by Mayor Mary Marvin. While call volume dipped slightly from 2024, the most common reasons residents called included home alarms, non-criminal assistance, car accidents, suspicious activity and traffic issues.

The department’s 25 sworn officers cover the village around the clock, with a desk officer and two patrol cars assigned at all times. Nearly half of the force has been with the department for 10 years or less, Marvin wrote.

New tools, more training

The department continued adding technology in 2025, including license plate readers that can alert officers about vehicles connected to criminal activity, body cameras, a drone used for searches and major events, and upgraded security cameras around the village.

Officers also completed more than 3,400 hours of training, covering areas such as de-escalation, emergency response, firearms, first aid and crisis negotiation.

The department reported seven use-of-force incidents and nine civilian complaints in 2025. Each complaint was investigated under department policy.

Ambulance service responds to 400 calls

Bronxville’s EVAC ambulance service responded to 400 medical calls last year. The village said the service operates through insurance reimbursements and private donations rather than fire district taxes.

Looking ahead, Marvin identified Lt. Nicholas DeYoung as the department’s next potential leader. DeYoung, who joined Bronxville police in 2007 after serving with the NYPD, oversees patrol training, internal affairs and the emergency response unit.