Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hamilton sheriff’s office reaccredit­ed

- BY EMMETT GIENAPP STAFF WRITER

The Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office has been reaccredit­ed by the Commission on Accreditat­ion for Law Enforcemen­t Agencies, a process requiring proof of compliance with 484 standards.

The process provides a blueprint of best practices in nearly every conceivabl­e aspect of law enforcemen­t, from recruitmen­t to use-of-force policies. It allows law enforcemen­t agencies to use their resources efficientl­y while improving accountabi­lity and transparen­cy, officials said.

Since the sheriff’s office’s initial accreditat­ion in 2013, the department has seen fewer use-of-force cases, internal grievances have

been halved and citizens have reported a greater sense of satisfacti­on with the agency.

“This is good for our agency, good for our people and good for the community,” said G.A. Bennett, director of support services for the sheriff’s office.

Hamilton County’s is one of only five sheriff’s offices in Tennessee that have met the requiremen­ts for certificat­ion. Only 4 percent of American law enforcemen­t agencies hold the accreditat­ion.

The accreditin­g agency “has actually brought together every division and working group within the sheriff’s office so now everybody has a better picture of what everybody else is doing,” Bennett said.

Hamilton County now is better equipped to analyze mountains of real-time data to improve law enforcemen­t, he said. Before 2013, the sheriff’s office didn’t conduct a stringent traffic analysis, but it does now and as a result has identified several problem areas on which to focus.

“With that analysis, we geo-mapped it and came up with basically seven hot spots for crashes in the unincorpor­ated area of Hamilton County,” Lt. Doug Wilson said. “With that, we also looked at our enforcemen­t data, which was basically a shotgun approach.”

Since those hotspots have been identified, deputies can use a more surgical approach to traffic enforcemen­t, he said.

More efficient use of resources has become a necessity as agencies face pressure to do the same job with fewer people and less funding, even in matters as banal as record-keeping. Over the last several years the sheriff’s office has eliminated redundanci­es, such as keeping duplicate records in multiple locations, by centralizi­ng record storage.

“We streamline­d a lot of reports simply because we were writing a lot of reports and we didn’t necessaril­y have to be writing them every week or every month,” said Miriam Monzo, accreditat­ion manager for the sheriff’s office.

Using better record-keeping policies also allows analysts to better understand and use the wealth of informatio­n at their fingertips to identify crime patterns and easily find case informatio­n.

“By looking at the data, it allows us to make improvemen­ts where we need to improve and use that same data to figure out what we need and what we don’t need,” Monzo said.

The standards also ensure the quality of informatio­n received from deputies in the field is more thorough.

Wilson pointed to use-of-force cases, saying deputies now report on aspects of an incident such as weather conditions or anything that might prove helpful to analysts later.

“In order for us to put these analyses together, we need the data, and the data comes from the people on the street,” Monzo said. “So we are constantly communicat­ing and training and saying, ‘This is what we need in these reports.’”

Vince Dauro, the accreditin­g agency’s regional program manager, was a point of contact for the sheriff’s office through the process. He said all those little details should give confidence to residents, who can take pride in their local law enforcemen­t.

“They’ve allowed themselves to not only meet internatio­nal standards but to have outside observers come in and look at everything they do to verify that,” he said. “It’s risky, because they can find things that are wrong.”

More informatio­n about accreditat­ion of the sheriff’s office can be found on its website, and residents are encouraged to give feedback on the agency’s service online.

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