East Bay Times

San Jose extends police chief search deadline

City hopes to fill the position by the end of February

- By Maggie Angst and Robert Salonga Contact Maggie Angst at and Robert Salonga at 408-920- 5002.

San Jose has extended a key deadline in its national search for a new police chief, suggesting the city is not satisfied with its current pool of candidates and wants to draw more outside applicants to vie for the role of top cop in the nation’s 10th-largest city.

The prolonged applicatio­n window marks a notable contrast from when the last chief, Eddie Garcia, was appointed four years ago without conducting a broad search, continuing a nearly 50-year streak of the city picking an SJPD veteran for its next police leader.

The applicatio­n deadline, which was set to expire on Dec. 31, was pushed out two weeks to Jan. 14, city officials confirmed Tuesday.

In an email announcing the new deadline, City Manager David Sykes told members of the police department that the extension would allow “additional potential applicants more time to complete the applicatio­n process after their holiday commitment­s.”

“We are committed to assembling the best possible applicant pool for this position, and we believe that extra time will allow for the best outcome,” Sykes wrote.

The city says it has completed nine virtual meetings and is surveying community members to gather input for the search. While the city waits for more applicatio­ns to come in, Sykes’ Chief of Staff Lee Wilcox said the city is finalizing its plan for the rest of the interview process, aiming to name a new chief by the end of February.

Recent SJPD Chief Eddie Garcia announced his retirement from the department in August and by mid- October, the city had launched its search for his replacemen­t. Late last month, Garcia was named the new police chief in Dallas, a city that has the country’s ninth-largest city population and a police department three times the size of that in San Jose.

San Jose has contracted its nationa l applicant search to Public Sector Search & Consulting — a recruiting firm run by former

Martinez police chief Gary Peterson, which conducted the Dallas search that led to Garcia’s hire there.

The firm, which has been in touch with potential applicants, recently recommende­d that the city extend its deadline to give more time to those who were considerin­g applying but got side-tracked by the holidays, Wilcox said. He called it an issue of “bad timing,” though the applicatio­n window had been open since Nov. 30 — nearly a month before the winter holidays.

Wilcox would not disclose how many internal and external applicatio­ns the city has received nor if any had already been deemed unqualifie­d.

Two sources close to the matter, though, said the deadline extension came from concerns about a lack of interest from qualified outside candidates — a plight that’s not new for San Jose but comes at a time marked by resounding calls for change in police department­s across the country.

Garrick Percival, a political science professor at San Jose State University, says that San Jose has struggled before to attract outside candidates for key roles due to its high cost of living, financial restraints tied to its small tax base and budget cuts that have led to low staffing and funding levels for a city of San Jose’s size. On top of that, in this particular search, San Jose had to compete with other big cities as an unpreceden­ted number of positions for police chiefs opened simultaneo­usly across the country.

“It’s a tough environmen­t,” Percival said. “But in San Jose particular­ly, with its high cost of living and a police force that’s really been starved for funding, that just may not be a super attractive position to attract a big pool of candidates — or enough that the city is comfortabl­e with.”

But given the exerted calls for reform lately, the urge to choose an external candidate may be stronger than during previous searches, Percival said.

“Most big cities and large police department­s — when going through a reform process — like to bring in people from the outside who will come with a fresh voice and that don’t carry some of the baggage from potential internal disputes within the department or city,” he said. “It doesn’t guarantee success by any stretch but we see this a lot.”

Several internal candidates from Garcia’s command staff are believed to be applying, and the past half- century of city history suggests a strong pull toward a department veteran. Joe McNamara, the iconic police chief who pioneered community policing in San Jose, was the city’s last truly outside police chief, having come from Kansas City in 1976.

Lou Covarrubia­z, a career San Jose officer, succeeded McNamara, who was followed by William Landsdowne, another SJPD top commander who left to lead Richmond police before returning to be chief in San Jose in 1998. Five years later, he was succeeded by Rob Davis, also a career SJPD officer, who served until 2010.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States