Biden Proposes $30 Billion To Expand Law Enforcement As Cops Continue To Leave

Police Officers Leaving
Police Officers Leaving

Highlights

Police officers are leaving. Per media reports, there are cities that don’t have enough police officers to respond to 911 calls.

President Biden proposes $30 billion in new police and crime prevention spending over the next decade.

Police proactivity has greatly diminished after the riots/protests. Violence is rising rapidly.

Author

Leonard Adam Sipes, Jr.

Retired federal senior spokesperson. Thirty-five years of directing award-winning public relations for national and state criminal justice agencies. Interviewed multiple times by every national news outlet. Former Senior Specialist for Crime Prevention for the Department of Justice’s clearinghouse. Former Director of Information Services, National Crime Prevention Council. Former Adjunct Associate Professor of criminology and public affairs-University of Maryland, University College. Former advisor to presidential and gubernatorial campaigns. Former advisor to the “McGruff-Take a Bite Out of Crime” national media campaign. Certificate of Advanced Study-Johns Hopkins University. Former police officer. Aspiring drummer.

Author of ”Success With The Media: Everything You Need To Survive Reporters and Your Organization” available at Amazon and additional booksellers.

Quotes

All quotes are edited for brevity or emphasis.

Article

Cops Are leaving. Recruitment Is plummeting. Violence is rising. President Biden Proposes $30 billion over the next decade for cops and crime prevention.

Axios

President Biden will propose more than $32 billion in new spending to fight crime, two White House officials familiar with his 2023 budget plans tells Axios, putting a price tag on his State of the Union call to fund — not defund — the police.

Why it matters: Biden wants to show Americans he is addressing rising crime, which threatens Democrats’ fortunes in the midterm elections.

Details: The budget proposal to be released Monday will include $20.6 billion for the next fiscal year for Department of Justice discretionary spending on federal law enforcement, crime prevention and intervention. That’s $2 billion more than the $18.6 billion enacted for the current fiscal year.

The proposal also would mandate $30 billion in new spending over the next decade on a variety of programs to expand law enforcement and crime prevention. Details on those programs have not yet been released.

Cops Leaving

From The Crime Report: In an effort to tackle staffing shortages, the Chicago Police Department is lowering hiring standards for new recruits by dropping the college credit requirement for some candidates who have two years of military or peace officer experience, or three years in corrections, social services, health care, trades, or education, reports CNN.

At least two other big-city police departments, in Philadelphia and New Orleans, have made similar moves in recent years and New York City Mayor Eric Adams applauded Chicago’s recruitment practices, and hinted at plans to duplicate them, after a trip to the city to meet with Mayor Lori Lightfoot.

Migdalia Bulnes, deputy chief of Chicago’s newly created recruiting team for the agency, said that their goal was to open the pool of applicants to people who have work experience but were not able to attend college to obtain the 60 credit hours required for the job.

Recruitment Plummets

In Chicago, about 3,800 people took the police department’s entry exam over the four months it was offered in 2021. As many as 22,000 took the exam in 2018, about 14,000 applicants in 2016, and about 19,000 applicants in 2013.

This is happening in cities throughout the country per media reports.

Resignations/Retirements

The Police Executive Research Forum found that, out of 180 police departments surveyed around the country, there were 42.7 percent more resignations in 2021 than in 2019, agencies of all sizes reported substantial increases in resignations from 2019 to 2021, and there were 23.6 percent more retirements in 2021 than in 2019.

Bureau Of Labor Statistics

I posted the numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics below. Note that there are approximately 700,000 sworn police officers with approximately 300,000 civilians in support. The chart below provides information on local law enforcement and excludes state and federal agencies.

The Marshall Project states that local police agencies lost about 4,000 employees per annual number comparing 2019-2021.

However, if you look at the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the country lost 11,009 local police officers from March of 2020 to March of 2021.

Chart

Number Of Police Officers

Number Of Police Officers

Chart

Police Officers Declining

Analysis

If we have a trend line of 4,000 officers leaving for one year and a preliminary yearly number of 11,009 for one month of 2021 (representing yearly data), that indicates that we may have a bigger problem with officers leaving than we originally thought.

I am in contact with the Bureau of Labor Statistics for updated data which was unavailable at the time of this writing. I will post it in a future article.

Earlier Police Executive Research Forum Data-Changes in Hiring, Resignation, and Retirement Rates

Hiring

For the April 2019-March 2020 period, responding agencies on average hired 8.67 officers per 100 current officers.

During the same period a year later, agencies hired only 8.21 new officers per 100 current officers.

That is a 5% decrease in the hiring rate.

Resignations

For the 2019-20 period, responding agencies reported 4.15 resignations per 100 officers.

During the same period a year later, 4.91 officers resigned per 100 officers.

That is an 18% increase in the resignation rate.

Retirements

For the 2019-20 period, agencies reported 2.85 retirements per 100 officers.

During the same period a year later, 4.14 officers retired per 100 officers.

That is a 45% increase in the retirement rate.

Agencies With 250 Or More Sworn Personnel Saw The Biggest Decreases.

There was a 29% reduction in the hiring rate for agencies with 250-499 officers.

There was a 36% reduction in the hiring rate for agencies with 500 or more officers.

PERF

A 63 Percent Reduction in Hiring Police Officers

Agencies participating in the survey reported that there has been a 63% decrease in applying to become a police officer. Departments are also having trouble hiring non-white/minority applicants the most, followed by female officers, according to the survey (based on data from the Police Executive Research Forum)

ABC News

Proactive Policing

Police officers in cities are no longer being appropriately proactive (per endless news reports) and proactivity is probably the only modality with a research base as to reducing crime, Proactive Policing.

Proactive policing prompts officers to take action (i.e., a person with a history of violence suspected of carrying a gun) when they have a legal right to investigate. But proactivity requires enormous risks and is the center of endless complaints against law enforcement. Many if not most big-city cops don’t want to end up on the front cover of the local newspaper if proactivity goes wrong. Proactivity required tremendous risk.

Data states that (72%) of officers are now less willing to stop and question suspicious persons, Pew.

Conclusions

It’s safe to say that there are far fewer police officers due to hiring, resignations and retirement issues. The question is whether or not decreasing numbers have an impact on violence or the provision of police services.

The Biden administration understands the political dynamics and is willing to spend billions to address the problem. The President is leaving behind the progressives who elected him who wanted a focus on police and criminal justice reform. It’s the administration’s acknowledgment that violence and fear of crime are at record levels.

Violence in the United States is growing rapidly. Arrests are plummeting. Correctional numbers are at record lows. Data indicate that resulting increases in violence are most impactful in cities, especially those that experienced protests and riots.

Per USA Today, violent crime surged after police across America retreated, USA Today. The topic of messaging to offenders and reform was addressed by PBS, PBS News Hour.

The best research-based plan at the moment to reduce violent crime is proactive policing; the modality that led us to numerous charges of excessive force and over-policing and was a partial cause of protests.

Under these circumstances, why would police officers willingly stay or engage in proactivity? If you ask them, they will tell you that they are doing exactly what protestors and citizens demanded. If they return to proactivity, which mayors across the country are asking, they want the rules of engagement written in stone. Communities demanding change need to participate and agree. Cops need firm guidance as to what communities want. They’re not getting it.

Violence reduction depends on sufficient numbers of well-trained proactive police officers with supportive communities. Although there was a consensus in most cities during previous periods of high crime, it doesn’t exist now. In the past, community leaders, politicians, and the media demanded that cops do whatever was legally possible to reduce crime. Some community leaders didn’t care about legalities, they simply wanted troublemakers gone. That was the basis of proactive policing.

When people believe that there is a breakdown in the ability of government to protect them, they purchase firearms, which is happening at alarming and record numbers per the FBI and industry sources. The vast increase in shootings is related to people engaged in retribution rather than the justice system handling their grievances. They now see cops and the system as impotent and unable to respond. Until that changes, violence will increase.

From The New Republic: “The Damning Truth Behind Cop “Walkout” Stories-The New York Times and other news media are laundering an exaggerated narrative about besieged officers—one that’s meant to threaten anyone who questions police power.” “Reporters are enabling a false narrative about demoralized cops fleeing their departments in the face of criticism for their misconduct…”

Based on the data, it’s my opinion that it’s the New Republic and advocacy publications that are creating a false narrative that is leading to the shattering of cities.

See More

See more articles on crime and justice at Crime in America.

Most Dangerous Cities/States/Countries at Most Dangerous Cities.

US Crime Rates at Nationwide Crime Rates.

National Offender Recidivism Rates at Offender Recidivism.

An Overview Of Data On Mental Health at Mental Health And Crime.

The Crime in America.Net RSS feed (https://crimeinamerica.net/?feed=rss2) provides subscribers with a means to stay informed about the latest news, publications, and other announcements from the site.

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