Billy Grogan was hired as police chief on December 17 of that year, with a mandate to have the police force operative by April 1, 2009. The first step was to hire senior staff and assign responsibilities for creating a department with 40-plus officers and additional support staff. One administrative staff member assumed responsibility for recruitment; another helped with background checks; and a third developed policies and procedures; two others procured equipment and set up training programs. All new officers were recruited from other departments, partly with the promise of good pay and benefits. The new officers were sworn in as a group on the evening of March 31, 2009, and set out in patrol cars at midnight. Descriptions of the efforts leading to this point address vehicle and other equipment purchases, funding, and the development of a community policing orientation. The challenges faced and overcome are reviewed. In an interview, Chief Grogan mentioned a number of lessons learned in building a police department from scratch. First, "surround yourself with good people, people that you know and can trust and rely on," Grogan said. Second, select officers who have a high standard of integrity, the training required to operate at a high level, and a commitment to make the community safer.
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Differentiation of Structurally Similar Phenethylamines via Gas Chromatography-Vacuum Ultraviolet Spectroscopy (GC-VUV)
- Body Fluid Identification Using a Targeted mRNA Massively Parallel Sequencing Approach - Results of a EUROFORGEN/EDNAP Collaborative Exercise
- The Application of Amplicon Length Heterogeneity PCR (LH-PCR) for Monitoring the Dynamics of Soil Microbial Communities Associated With cadaver decomposition