"Managing in the Millennium : A matter
of balance"
by Carole Moore (published on officer.com 10-21-09)
In the ongoing budgetary crises that have become
endemic in local government, law enforcement agencies find
themselves facing unprecedented challenges. I wrote about
this in last month’s column, but it’s such an important
issue, with agency and career-changing effects attached to
it, that I want to take another look at it.
We all know that money is tighter than it’s
been in most of our lifetimes. In the recent past, law enforcement
officers have been virtually immune from job loss due to economic
downturns. In fact, the security of a law enforcement position
was about the only thing a potential police officer could
count on. Things have changed and, from the looks of it, they’re
not getting better.
When I wrote this column, I was shaking my head
at the news that the town of Fitchburg, Mass., demoted police
officers to save money and lessen the likelihood of police
layoffs. In addition, news reports at the time stated 12 dispatchers
were let go, and nine police officers were reassigned to dispatch.
The department had to ditch both its traffic and drug divisions,
and had gone from 94 members to 80. Things may have changed
since these initial reports, but I doubt the Fitchburg Police
remain unaffected.
Demotions are a horrible, counterproductive
idea that no city manager should encourage. In fact, to take
a rank that an officer has worked hard to reach and demote
that officer in order to save money is nothing short of demeaning,
and a lousy payback for a lifetime of service to a community.
I realize times are tight and government on
all levels needs to rethink its spending habits. No longer
can the public well be considered bottomless, or public dollars
expendable. This is a real crisis and law enforcement isn’t
going to emerge unscathed. But I also think there are better
ways to save money. Here are a few of the questions I have
about this cataclysmic tendency:
Do town officials receive pay or other financial-based
consideration (like health insurance) for serving on boards?
I
think cutting or even doing away with compensation for such
service makes better sense than demoting police officers.
For
cities where serving on a board is the equivalent of a full-time
job, then I suggest a demotion is in order: Pay them less.
How many positions have been cut in other
departments? While I
understand the importance of planners and administration,
police
protection is simply not negotiable. Cutting police protection
is sacrificing safety. To me it’s a no-brainer. How
many police
jobs can be saved by chopping some of the fat in the city,
town
or county manager’s office?
Are cities or counties still forging ahead
with capital
improvement projects? If yes, then stop. Anything
capital-improvement oriented belongs to another time and
another
budget, in my opinion.
How are city hall and other public buildings
being furnished or
decorated? What about Christmas decorations, new cars, planting
flowers? These are all nice but police are necessary; wreaths
on
telephone poles are not. Are departments — police included
— returning unspent money? If
not, then they should have been doing so for years. Make
it
happen. I’ve been in government and I know there is
always
something left over. This is one of my pet peeves because
I
think spending out your budget unnecessarily is a violation
of
the public trust.
Are the bureaucrats who run the city or county
administration
taking pay cuts? What about additional positions? Adding
anything else to payroll should be a no-no.
I don’t pretend to have all the answers,
but I believe police departments should pare down to their
best fighting weights. The budget crunch only hurts the taxpayers
when it starts impacting boots on the ground. Demoting and
cutting sworn officers should not be an option.
Carole Moore has served in and has extensive
training in many law enforcement disciplines. She welcomes
comments at carolemoore_biz@yahoo.com
|