• LAW ENFORCEMENT SHORTAGE IN TEXAS HAS REACHED CRISIS LEVEL, SHERIFFS SAY
    In March Atlanta Police Department posted a help wanted ad to recruit new officers to the force. City Manager David Cockrell confirmed the City is still looking for officers.
  • LAW ENFORCEMENT SHORTAGE IN TEXAS HAS REACHED CRISIS LEVEL, SHERIFFS SAY
    In February Cass County Sheriffs Department introduced Cass County Deputies Joshuah Kauffman and Gannon Tiller. (Courtesy Photo)

LAW ENFORCEMENT SHORTAGE IN TEXAS HAS REACHED CRISIS LEVEL, SHERIFFS SAY

LAW ENFORCEMENT SHORTAGE IN TEXAS HAS REACHED CRISIS LEVEL, SHERIFFS SAY

 

Publishers Note: Morale, low pay, Covid, and national discontent have made the challenge of being a police officer even harder. Many in the community, though are still very appreciative of the hard work in the midst of challenging situations. Below the articles is additional localization of this timely reprinted article. I hope that people will take the time to thank the police officers for the work they do.

In nearly every county, the situation is the same: Sheriff ’s offices are struggling to keep deputies on the streets and jailers in their jails -- a crisis in law enforcement that mirrors a trend nationwide.

This year in Polk County, north of Houston, Sheriff Byron Lyons lost three deputies in a week - one who went to work for the city police force and another to Walmart. In his 20 years with the Sheriff ’s Office, the current shortage is the worst it has had, he said.

“I know that me being shorthanded is not a problem exclusive for me, “Lyons said. “There are agencies in the entire state and nation that are struggling trying to find officers. We are all suffering the same thing.”

Sheriffs cite several reasons for losing deputies and jailers low pay, long hours, dangers on the job, and most notably lately, the villainization of law enforcement. The last item was made worse by the killing of George Floyd, nationwide protests against police, and calls to defund police departments. “It has created a culture where law enforcement as a profession isn’t very popular,” said Thomas Kerss, a former Nacogdoches County sheriff who now works as a consultant for the Texas Association of Counties. “It’s hard to attract a lot of people into an unpopular profession.”

The pandemic added another layer of complexity, resulting in labor shortages in all professions. “It is starting to come back,” Kerss said. “Some jobs faster than others. “Lubbock County Sheriff Kelly Rowe, who is also president of the Sheriffs’ Association of Texas, said he remembers a time when young people were excited to go into law enforcement, to become a beat cop, then possibly join SWAT or become a narcotics officer. Law enforcement was a tradition in families, he said, and for people getting out of the military. Rowe, himself, joined the police force after leaving the service. He said he couldn’t figure out what he wanted to do. His dad told him to go on a ride-along with a friend who was a sheriff ’s deputy in Midland.

“It wasn’t even that exciting of a night,” he said, “But I was sold.” For many, the call to serve and protect outweighed the desire for higher pay A deputy starting out often makes as low as $30,000 a year.

“This is not a job. It’s a way of life, “said Ector County Sheriff Mike Griffis. “You are going to miss holidays, birthdays, soccer games, Christmas. You have to convince yourself it’s very rewarding in the end” The problem is even more complicated in county jails, where detention officers make even less than sheriff ’s deputies for what Kerss said is often a thankless job. Jails are seeing an increase in violent offenders. Detention officers work long hours, are exposed to communicable diseases, and have to address mental health concerns they are not trained to handle.

Today, half of the inmates entering county jails have received mental health services prior to arriving, and about 30% of those need a significant level of care and medications to keep them stable, Rowe said. They stay in custody twice as long as other offenders because of the time it takes to prove them competent to stand trial. The majority would be better served by the state hospital system, Rowe said, but that is experiencing its own drastic shortages Today, there are only 2,200 mental health beds in the state.

“More and more, over time, the role of the county jailer is not just to secure the jail but to try and monitor mental health concerns, people that are in crisis and really shouldn’t be in jail, but jails are the only facilities typically can’t say no,” Kerss said.

In Ector County in West Texas, whose population is 161,000, Griffis said his department is currently 71 jailers short. He has had to send many of his inmates to other county jails that have the beds and the staffing to take them in, which comes at a high expense. Or they have to pull people from patrol and courthouse security to take shifts, to ensure they have the required jailer-to-inmate ratio mandated by the Texas Commission on Jail Standards to stay open.

Those decisions have a ripple effect, especially in a county that already has 18 deputy positions unfilled. Shortages can have real and often tragic consequences: response times are slower, interactions with the public are poorer, and morale in offices is at an all-time low. Deputies respond to priority calls such as fights, shots fired, and family violence, but the lesser property crimes take a back seat.

“It’s disheartening to know we can’t provide the service that I wish we could,” Griffis said.

Ector County did recently approve a relocate ion bonus to encourage people from other counties to join the Sheriff ’s Office Many counties are hamstrung in their ability to raise funds because of state legislation that prevents there from increasing property tax revenue more than 3.5%.

“About three, four years ago, we sat down to do a budget, and I told the court at that time, there will be a day you have to pay a peace officer more than you pay anyone in local government just to take the job, due to what was going on in America at that time,” Griffis said. “Now it’s even worse. I don’t know that money would fix the problem, but it’s going to get to the point that that’s going to be the only draw to take the job.”

Since the problem is so layered, sheriffs across the state struggle to find a solution. Kerss said law enforcement reforms have to happen in tandem with reforms to the state hospital system so that jails are not full of people with mental health problems. And in addition to higher pay, Griffis encourages counties to pay for childcare, because many in law enforcement have to work long hours. But Rowe argues that most importantly, a major shift is needed in the way we think about law enforcement, to value it again as a profession. “That’s got to be the first step,” he said. (End of Mary Huber Story)

Here in Cass County, as everywhere, law force hiring is a challenge. Many times, each situation may contribute to the loss and recruitment of police. However, nonetheless, the challenge is still here in our community too.

City Manager Lee Elliott noted that “first, nationally and locally, all law enforcement is struggling to recruit new law enforcement personnel. The demand is high, and the supply has declined for law enforcement. Linden is not a wealthy community and faces greater challenges than metro cities recruiting officers due to less revenue.“ Lee went on to say though, that “the positives of a small and rural community are less crime. We are doing our best to increase wages and benefits. We are attempting to recruit which leads to us selling other soft qualities which are our advantage of a small organization and happy community. Our Chief is able to sell our culture, which is a close-knit, family-first atmosphere selling community policing. Fortunately, we are a low-crime community and a service-first police force with a positive reciprocal relationship with the county and state law enforcement.

“We believe the “Mayberry” approach helps recruit officers and it is also why people are moving to Linden. We are using family or people-first approaches to sell our advantages to recruit policemen and citizens. Linden is providing younger officers the ability to receive higher levels of certifications and to gain experience while incubating upper mobility. Linden’s supportive council and Mayor strive to enhance higher levels of experience afforded to them in a smaller but safer community which generates a successful environment for employees or families.”

Regardless of the challenges, being a police officer is truly a call. Even at times with low pay, many of our officers continue to put their life on the line to keep the community safe. County Judge Travis Ransom, agrees, ““Law enforcement officers handle some of the most challenging situations in our society. Generally speaking, they deal with many people who are having the worst day of their life. It is truly selfless service.”