Police problems: Boosting dept. numbers key? (Printed Nov. 23, 2007)


By Amanda Estes

Staff Writer

Crime in South Portland may be on the rise, but the city’s police
department is still operating with the same number of patrol cars that
were on the streets in the 1970s. Now residents and officers alike are
saying more competitive salaries and benefits are essential in boosting
the department’s numbers.

“I believe [the officers] do a very good job, but they’re very limited
with resources and manpower,” said resident John Hanlon. “These are our
first responders. They need our support and if that is through raising
taxes than that is what has to be done.”

Resident Marsha Barash said she has seen an increase in crime in the
western part of the city. Barash said she has witnessed assaults with
weapons, burglaries and vandalism from her home.  

“When I call the police, I always have to call them two or three times more – ‘Are you coming?’” she said.

Hanlon and Barash were among the nine residents who said they were
disturbed by the committee’s report during a Nov. 14 city council
workshop that drew a significant turnout to what are normally sparsely
attended meetings.

Nearly a year has passed since Mayor Claude Morgan established a Police
Department Staffing and Retention Committee to evaluate the department
and make recommendations for hiring and retaining qualified officers.

According to the report, there are currently four patrol officers who
respond to emergency calls in the city at any given time. Ten officers,
or 20 percent of the force, is currently eligible for retirement and
that number is expected to increase to 75 percent by 2012.

The committee’s recommendations include hiring three new officers by
2010, offering more competitive salaries and benefits, streamlining the
hiring process, changing ordinances to allow “lateral entry” or the
ability for officers to transfer their skills to a position comparable
to their level of experience, the ability to start officers at higher
pay levels and allowing for more flexible scheduling options.

According to the report, starting pay for a South Portland officer is
roughly $31,740 a year, compared to the national average of $36,048.
Neighboring communities Cape Elizabeth and Scarborough pay their new
officers roughly $38,478 a year and $38,577 a year, respectively. Both
agencies also offer lateral entry.

South Portland is currently one of the few agencies in Maine to not
offer lateral entry for officers, but that may be changing. The South
Portland Police Patrolmen’s Association (SPPPA), the patrol officers’
union, has signed a tentative agreement with the city to offer officers
the ability to start at up to the five-year pay level.  Committee
member Robert Schwartz, who is a retired police officer and chairman of
the city’s civil service commission, which oversees the hiring process,
said the agency has also reduced testing time for new applicants.

Police Chief Edward Googins said the department is not facing a “looming crisis,” but is already in the midst of a crisis.

Officer Edward Knutson said 2010 is too long to wait to put more officers on the streets.

“We don’t have time to basically run traffic anymore,” he said.

According to the report, officer-initiated activities such as traffic
stops decreased last year by more than 2,000 incidents since 2000.
Increases in responsibilities and changes in procedure have had an
effect on officers’ availability, the committee found.

Knutson said when officers encounter domestic calls they often can’t
afford to wait for backup to arrive on the scene so they go in alone,
elevating the danger to themselves and residents.

Councilor Kay Loring called for more officers on the street by next year.

“People have said this to me –‘I call the police and I got a Scarborough police officer. Why?’” she said.

According to the report, the police department can respond to “one
major incident or two priority calls” before it must call in assistance
from neighboring communities. In 2005, neighboring agencies responded
to 189 requests for assistance in the city.

Resident Bill Laidley, who said the discussion was “fueled by fear,”
questioned whether merging the local departments into one agency might
be more effective.

“Maybe we need better procedures in the department,” Laidley said.
“Maybe too many of them are writing grants to get more money from
homeland security.”

Following the meeting, councilor-elect Tom Blake said in order to offer
more competitive salaries, the city needs to seek alternate sources of
revenue rather than raise taxes.

“South Portland is a service center for all of southern Maine,” he
said. “We are a center for transportation and historically we have gone
the route alone and the taxpayers have bore the burden.”

Blake, who will succeed Ralph Baxter, Sr. following a Dec. 3
inauguration, said city officials must actively seek state and federal
dollars.

“It’s unfortunate we let it get to this point,” he said. “We cannot let things like this deteriorate in the future.”






 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
  • No trackbacks exist for this post.
Comments
  • No comments exist for this post.
Leave a comment

Submitted comments are subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.