Long Beach leaders on Tuesday will review data from a pilot program that seeks to crack down on nuisance motels, and will consider expanding the program citywide.

Over the past year, officials from various city departments have compiled a list motels that have the highest number of police service calls—and the most violent calls—and identified six of the biggest offenders, all of them located in downtown, in Central Long Beach and North Long Beach:

Luxury Inn, 5950 Long Beach Blvd.

Searle Motel, 6124 Long Beach Blvd.

Stallion Inn Motel, 6057 Atlantic Ave.

Colonial Motel, 802 E. Pacific Coast Highway

Travelodge (Long Beach Convention Center), 80 Atlantic Ave.

Greenleaf Hotel, 63 Lime Ave.

Data to determine these six businesses was compiled from police calls from Jan. 1, 2014, to May 2017.

The pilot program, which began in October and continues through September, includes a compliance plan for each motel.

City staff from a range of departments are also working with owners and managers to improve security through better environmental design, maintenance, vetting of patrons, increased security inspections and establishing activity logs.

So far, the program appears to be working, said Tracy Colunga, director of the city’s Innovation Team, which is involved in the data collection and oversight of the program.

“So far they’ve been good actors,” she said of the six motels. “We expect good results.”

Vice Mayor Rex Richardson is proposing on Tuesday the council look at expanding the program, possibly including more motels, and additional enforcement tools to keep them in check.

This could include:

An amendment to city law that would establish alternative enforcement other than the police department, including the health department and the city’s Human Trafficking Task Force.

Treating some of these motels more like residential housing establishments, subject to similar laws, since many house Section 8 and other low-income residents.

Targeting environment-site issues and structural issues with the buildings, rather than tenants or owners.

Longer-term, the city could also enact some measures to remove businesses from operation, particularly in high-crime areas where there are many motels but little demand from tourists. Staff note in a report to the City Council, however, that this could have legal ramifications, and the city would need outside legal and economic analysis.

The report to the City Council notes that as yet, expanding the program is unbudgeted and unfunded.

The City Council meets at 5 p.m. Tuesday in Council Chambers, 333 W. Ocean Blvd.

Staff writer Courtney Tompkins contributed to this report.