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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCC AG PKT 2009-03-09 #HAGENDA STAFF REPORT DATE: March 9, 2009 TO: Honorable Mayor and City Council THRU: David Carmany, City Manager FROM: Jeff Kirkpatrick, Chief of Police SUBJECT: POLICE RECRUITING AND RETENTION ISSUES AND INCENTIVES SUMMARY OF REQUEST: Urban police departments around the nation, within California, and especially the Seal Beach Police Department, are struggling to attract qualified recruits. This shortage of qualified applicants has reached critical proportions. Staff is requesting the City Council to consider authorizing the use of historically unconventional recruiting methods and incentives to attract qualified recruits to the police department and to retain those employees and police officers in good standing. BACKGROUND: ISSUE Estimates by the California Peace Officers Standards and Training Commission (POST), which regulates the hiring and training of California police officers and deputy sheriffs, supported by Rand Corporation and International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) studies of peace officer recruitment and retention, indicate that California alone has approximately 8,000 open, sworn peace officer positions, which are and will remain unfilled. One percent (1 %) of peace officer applicants in California successfully matriculate through academy, field training, probationary periods and out to five years of tenure. If this figure were applied against the 8,000 current statewide peace officer openings, then it would take approximately 640,000 applicants to fill those openings. Such a pool of qualified applicants does not exist today and is unlikely to exist in the future! The Seal Beach Police Department's sworn ranks have been consistently shorthanded for all of the last four years and for many years prior, by as much as almost 36%. For each of those last four years a minimum of three (3} and as Agenda Item ~"~ Police Department Recruiting & Retention Issues 2 many as seven (7) police officers have remained off-duty and incapable of work for extended periods of time due to on-the-job incurred injuries and illness. Several have been retired due to their injuries and one currently awaits an outcome regarding his injury and a disability retirement. During this time, only two officers have received a `full-service' retirement. (`Full- service retirement' means that an officer serves his/her entire 30+ years and did not use the disability system.) Recently, one officer has been promoted from within the Department's civilian core and two officers have been promoted from within the Department's Reserve Officer (volunteer) Corps. These promotions backfilled an officer fired for not matriculating through training and for two disability retirements. Two other disability retirements were backfilled "off of the street." The Department is now using previously long-term programs as a new `farm system' to supply the organization with the potential to backfill openings as they occur. We are developing future police officers from our Community Service Officer (CSO) and Reserve Police Officer (RPO) programs. However, there are limitations to our ability to exploit these two programs. • Current CSO's are working to meet personal living needs. It is financially difficult or impossible for them to put themselves through local, college-based, police academies without financial sponsorship. More than a decade ago, the State changed the training requirements for community members to become Reserve Police Officers (RPO's). Community members wishing to become RPO's must now attend a full-time police academy (up to six months) or part-time for a year. Businessmen and working folks typically do not have the time to devote to such training. This report will later address a means to better support and exploit these two programs. STAFFING The department is allotted fifty-four (54) full-time employees to service the community. Of the thirty (30) sworn personnel, twenty-six (26) of those officers are assigned to the Patrol and Detective Bureaus with the primary responsibility of responding to immediate calls for service at any time, anywhere within the community. The Department is committed to hiring only the most qualified applicants available. It has resisted a national trend to lower recruiting and hiring standards and open the organization and community to the problems a lowering of standards brings. However, even if hiring standards are lowered, the statistics demonstrate there are not enough applicants to go around. Minimum Police Department Recruiting & Retention Issues 3 qualifications include very clean histories, sound personal and financial backgrounds, a past and present drug free lifestyle, along with physical and psychological soundness for the job. Minimum standards do not currently place a premium on formal education beyond a high school diploma. The Department's standards are necessarily stringent and high for applicants to honorably and ethically serve the Seal Beach community. Moreover, with an eye to succession and replacement, the City recently requested a Public Agency Retirement Services agency study of police department staff relative to their retirement eligibility. Currently eight (8) police officers are immediately eligible for retirement -today. If all eight officers decided to take service retirements in 2009, we would have to replace each of them - or 26% of our police force! At least three more officers are eligible for service retirements within the period from 2010-2012, with more to follow in large groups thereafter. The Department is staffed with a `minimum-staffing' level of personnel (meaning that each on-duty police officer has one other officer available to him/her as a backup) to achieve minimum safety standards for themselves and the community. This equates to three (3) officers and a supervisor on each of two shifts per day, every day. If one of them cannot work due to injury or illness, that officer must be replaced (`backfilled') by officers called away from a regular day off, training, or vacation. There are shifts that frequently run short because other personnel are simply not available. As an example, during the recent Freeway Complex Wildfires, as many as ten (10) officers were unavailable due to illness, vacation, pre-approved out-of-town absences, etc. We had no personnel to offer to satisfy mutual-aid requests. It is necessary to maintain a full complement of police officers to serve our public. Officer and community safety concerns are paramount. `Officer Safety' is the law enforcement maxim, which recognizes that it is a hazardous profession -even in Seal Beach. Officers voluntarily put themselves into potentially dangerous situations in order to protect and serve their community. Consequently, they must constantly serve as each other's protector. Our officers face risks that range from undercover drug stings to volatile domestic disturbances and armed robberies. Unfortunately, violence as a viable tactic to escape and avoid incarceration is a daily potential. Other agencies throughout the state, including Orange and Los Angeles counties, are now using non-traditional methods and incentives to attract and retain qualified recruits. The chart below is a sampling of recruiting incentives polled from industry trade magazines and is designed to attract interest. Police Department Recruiting & Retention Issues 4 PEACE OFFICER RECRUITING INCENTIVES 1 $5,000 signing bonus following completion of FTO Program San Francisco PD 2 $20,000 down payment for San Francisco home purchase San Francisco PD 3 $5,000 relocation fees paid for San Francisco renters San Francisco PD 4 4 week mini-sabbatical paid annually in-lieu of paid holiday time: Citrus Heights PD 5 Academy grads are reimbursed up to $2,500 for academy tuition and expenses upon successful completion of probationary period Citrus Heights PD 6 No interest, two-year loan up to $2,500 for purchase of laptop computer Antioch PD 7 $10,000 signing bonus Antioch PD 8 200 hours sick-leave carry over from former agency/laterals Santa Cruz SD, Richmond PD 9 $6,000 signing bonus for lateral officers Santa Cruz SD, Richmond PD 10 $3,000 signing bonus for entry level officers Santa Cruz SD, Richmond PD 11 Education pay -- AA-5%, BA-15%, MA-20% EI Segundo PD 12 100% paid college tuition/books EI Segundo PD 13 Paid retiree medical benefit EI Segundo PD 14 Transfer up to 960 hours of sick time for lateral officers Santa Rosa PD 15 Immediate Top Step pay for qualified lateral officers Santa Rosa PD 16 4% base pay for Master Police Officer Program Santa Rosa PD 17 3% shift differential Newport Beach PD 18 Credit for prior service Newport Beach PD 19 Appointment comparable to or above current salary BART PD 20 3 weeks vacation after first year plus annual vacation buy-back plan BART PD 21 Employer subsidized health club membership Fairfield PD 22 Assigned vehicle program Costa Mesa PD 23 2.5% Uniform assignment pay Costa Mesa PD 24 Shortened probation process for laterals Richmond PD 25 Paid medical benefit at retirement Richmond PD 26 Lateral transfers may apply up to 5 years previous service toward longevity pay Vacaville PD 27 Retiree medical coverage Vacaville PD 28 Annual sick-leave buy back program ~ Gardena PD 29 $450/month Specialty pay Citrus Heights PD Additionally, city and police organizations can do much to enhance their recruiting and retention efforts as suggested by Rand Corporation, California P.O.S.T., and I.A.C.P. studies. Each suggests organizational retooling as indicated in the chart below. Police Department Recruiting & Retention Issues 5 SELECTED RAND, P,O.S.T. and I.A.C.P. STUDY SUGGESTIONS ON RECRUITING/RETENTION 1 Use department employees as recruiters & give them $$ bonuses for referring successful candidates. 2 Include an on-line sample test on department's website to give recruits an idea of what types of questions they might face on qualification exams. 3 Ensure that the exam pass-points are reasonable. 4 Allow other standardized tests such as the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery to substitute for other traditional written exams, attracting veterans. 5 Establish stable funding for recruiting efforts that become line items in the department's budget. 6 Establish a 'police recruit' job classification and sponsor academy recruits. 7 Establish a recruiting team. 8 Advertised via a recruiting video at a local chain theater and You Tube 9 Start experienced officers at higher rates on the pay scale. Renegotiate union contracts to eliminate any delays in experienced officers receiving benefits (i.e. education incentives). 1 ~ Create My Space and Face Book pages to market Departments audiences that are Internet savvy and technologically aware. 11 Use an approach similar to college sports recruiting involving a lot of personal attention given to applicant. 12 Sponsor applicant through police academy. 13 Place recruiting adsldisplays in public restroam locations: restaurants, health clubs, etc. 14 Place recruiting ads billboards on buses, bus stops, mobile billboards, etc. 15 Hire part-time officers with competitive pay. Organization and candidate get to test the culture for long-term fit. 16 Use WWW hits by locations to target applicants. 17 Assign an "officer mentor" to personally assist applicants. 18 A pay for performance evaluation program that identifies and recognizes blue chippers. 19 Assign an "officer mentor" to personally assist applicants. The City and Department have done much toward retaining employees. Yet despite these efforts, attracting qualified applicants for peace officer positions remains difficult. We have implemented the following to date, including: 1. Developed and implemented uniform standards for duty clothing. 2. Developed a Career Development. Program for all employees (to be implemented in 2009). 3. Developed an advanced training matrix dictating mandated and other necessary training for all job classifications. 4. Joined a P.O.S.T. funded two-year team building program where past, present, and future performance and strategies are analyzed, designed, and implemented. 5. Developed and implemented an employee performance evaluation system mandating high standards. 6. Developed and implemented a CompStat Professional Accountability system for all employees mandating, reviewing, and demanding high, ongoing, personal and professional standards. Police Department Recruiting & Retention Issues 6 7. Developed and implemented a uniform fleet and personal equipment standardization matrix ensuring all equipment is contemporary, state-of- the-art, and force multiplying. 8. Developed and implemented state-of-the-art office automation, networking, and information technologies. 9. Developed and implemented an awards recognition system, coupled with an annual awards ceremony (partnered with the SB Chamber of Commerce). 10. Developed and implemented a service ribbon program acknowledging superior service, for wear on uniforms. 11. Completely revamped the Field Training Officer Program and assigned `Mentor' FTO's to new hires. This Council Agenda Report is not necessarily a request for more officers. It is a request for authorization to employ new, non-traditional recruiting methods to fill our current openings and to prepare for those looming in our very near future. The City and Department have historically used traditional recruiting methods to fill vacancies in an attempt to maintain minimum staffing standards. Traditional methods include visits to college police academies and job fairs, placing ads in law enforcement trade magazines, newspapers, and other media locations thought to be frequented by job hunters. We have approached military commanders and requested they place their soldiers who are soon to muster out of military service into local police academies (on the Federal dime) so they will have smooth transitions from military to civilian life. We have advertised on Web- based `head hunter' sites such as Monster.com and Amazon.com. Nevertheless, recruiting takes money, energy, and resources. Everything the City and Department have done to date has literally been `done on the cheap." Neither the City nor the police department has a sufficient number of personnel to dedicate to active recruiting. FINANCIAL IMPACT: To be determined based upon City Council direction. RECOMMENDATION: Staff recommends that the City Council receive and file this report and also direct the City Manager to pursue non-traditional recruiting and retention strategies. SUBMI D BY: NOTED AND APPROVED: l ,l ;' ~,.. ~~~ J Ki patrick, Chief of Polic David Carmany, City Manager