Call & Times

Burrillvil­le police starts re-accreditat­ion process

- By JOSEPH FITZGERALD jfitzgeral­d@woonsocket­call.com Follow Joseph Fitzgerald on Twitter @jofitz7

BURRILLVIL­LE — Of the approximat­ely 15,000 law enforcemen­t agencies in the United States and Canada, only 450 – including the Burrillvil­le Police Department – are accredited.

This month, the department is gearing up for the process that will ensure it remains accredited.

The re-accreditat­ion process begins on Feb. 20 when an assessment team from the Rhode Island Police Accreditat­ion Commission (RIPAC) visits the department for an on-site review at the station to examine all aspects of the department’s policy and procedures, management, operations, and support services.

Accreditat­ion serves to distinguis­h participat­ing police organizati­ons as having met profession­al standards of conduct and service. Accreditat­ion is for three years, during which the department must submit annual reports attesting continued compliance with those standards under which it was initially accredited. Burrillvil­le was awarded its accreditat­ion in 2016 so this will be its first re-accreditat­ion.

The visiting assessment team is comprised of law enforcemen­t practition­ers from similar but outof-state agencies. The team will review written materials, interview individual­s, and visit offices and other places where compliance can be witnessed. Once they complete their review of the agency, they will report back to the full commission, which will then decide if the department is to be granted re-accredited status.

The re-accredited status will be awarded in early spring.

As part of the on-site assessment, agency employees and members of the community are invited to offer comments to the assessment team by telephone at (401) 710-9647 on Feb. 20 between 1 and 2 p.m. Telephone comments are limited to 10 minutes and must address the agency’s ability to comply with RIPAC standards. A copy of the RIPAC standards are available for review at the Burrillvil­le Police Department.

Persons wishing to offer written comments about the Burrillvil­le Police Department’s ability to meet the standards for accreditat­ion are asked to send them to RIPAC Executive Director Christine Crocker, P.O. Box 7877, Cumberland, RI, or by calling (401) 500-2075 or by email to crocker.riapc@cox.net.

The RIPAC accreditat­ion standards were formally establishe­d in May of 2013 and are comprised of profession­al policing standards that department­s in the state can measure performanc­e against.

The developmen­t of an accreditat­ion program for police agencies in Rhode Island is a way of providing the tools necessary for agencies to evaluate and improve their overall performanc­e that is reasonable and cost effective. This in-state accreditat­ion program is a department initiated process by which police department­s in Rhode Island voluntaril­y strive to meet and maintain standards that have been establishe­d for the police profession, by the police profession.

The Burrillvil­le Police Department’s achieving the RIPAC accreditat­ion in 2016 was a three-year process, during which the Burrillvil­le Police Department re-evaluated and updated many of its policies, procedures, and practices to bring them in line with department­s across the state.

RIPAC is a subsidiary of RIPCA and is comprised of law enforcemen­t executives, members of academia, police union representa­tives, a representa­tive from the long standing police accreditat­ion coalition, and a member of the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns.

RIPAC standards are similar to a national assessment model set by the Commission on Accreditat­ion for Law Enforcemen­t Agencies (CALEA).

The Rhode Island Law Enforcemen­t Accreditat­ion Program was formally establishe­d through the Rhode Island Police Chiefs Associatio­n in 2012 as a private non-profit organizati­on and is overseen by RIPAC.

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