The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Police pay increase sparks salary fight

Local cops say they deserve raise similar to state officers.

- Police pay continued on A17 By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com and Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com

A year ago, Gov. Nathan Deal stood before an imposing phalanx of steely eyed police officers and announced his major policy initiative for the year — a proposal to raise state law enforcemen­t pay by 20 percent.

What seemed so uncontrove­rsial at the time has ballooned into a broader debate that has riven the law enforcemen­t community, shaken up the race for governor and set off a clash over the worth of police officers.

Among county and city law enforcemen­t officials, Deal’s pay hike for state troopers touched a nerve. Local cops — who make the vast majority of arrests in the state and account for most of those killed in the line of duty — argue they deserve a similar raise. And they want the state to foot the bill.

“The public wants to pay us,” said Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills. “It’s the government officials who can’t get it together.”

Gubernator­ial candidates from both parties have explored hiking salaries of local police. A task force convened by Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle in May suggested increasing the existing premium tax by 1 percent on auto insurance policies plus

a state base supplement of $5,000 per year per sworn officer.

The issue could come to a head in the legislativ­e session that begins in January. Lawmakers are expected to debate several proposals that would boost local law enforcemen­t pay.

Meanwhile, the Georgia Sheriffs Associatio­n is looking to force the issue with a proposal that could raise the salaries of sheriff ’s deputies to equal state troopers, and make county jailers’ salaries the same as state correction­al officers.

Some county law enforcemen­t officials are coming up with their own solutions. In Cobb County, lawmakers are considerin­g a proposal to raise the county’s sales tax to boost the county’s public safety department.

“What the governor did touched every county, every police department. In the great scheme of things, the state now gets to choose who they want,” said Commission­er Bob Weatherfor­d, who introduced the proposal. “And that’s focused everybody, in smaller counties and larger ones, to keep an eye on raises.”

State leaders are left in a bind, torn between support for front-line local police — who wield political clout in their communitie­s — and fears of setting a costly new precedent.

Some have echoed Deal’s stance that the state should have no role in setting sheriff deputy pay because it would give Georgia the “control mechanism” over local officers — and require the state to come up with the money to pay for it.

House Speaker David Ralston said he worries that sheriffs see the push for a minimum wage as a “way for somebody else to do their dirty work — which is to get pay raises through the back door without going the traditiona­l route” of going to their county commission­s and seeking a pay boost.

“Some sheriffs worry they can’t be seen as asking for this because it looks like increasing spending,” he added. “At some point, you have to understand that’s part of the job.”

‘I have to have parity’

The governor’s budget proposal, overwhelmi­ngly approved early this year by the state Legislatur­e, raised annual pay for more than 3,300 state troopers by an average of $8,000 at a cost of about $80 million. It immediatel­y boosted state patrol pay in Georgia from 50th in the nation to 24th in the nation.

It also started a full-blown fight with local agencies scrambling to match the new $35,741 starting pay for a trained state trooper. The average statewide starting sheriff ’s deputy pay is about $29,000, but several counties pay well below $25,000. The average annual starting pay for jailers is $25,300.

The pay disparity has had dire implicatio­ns for some deputies on the front lines. An analysis by the nonpartisa­n Center on Budget and Policy Priorities showed that roughly 3,200 law enforcemen­t officers in Georgia rely on food stamps. And sheriffs officials are preparing to make their case to lawmakers.

Terry Norris, the executive director of the Georgia Sheriffs’ Associatio­n, said local officers are responsibl­e for more than 94 percent of the arrests in Georgia last year — and seven of the nine officers killed in the line of duty in 2016. His organizati­on is backing a one-cent sales tax to help fund a new mandatory minimum salary for deputy sheriffs and jailers.

Norris said sheriffs don’t expect local property taxpayers to pay the costs, especially since some rural counties have minuscule tax bases. But he said county sheriffs have a sweep of mandates outlined in state law or defined by court cases that have never been funded by state appropriat­ions.

It’s not just rural areas where police department­s are fighting to keep up with the state.

“There will have to be attention paid to salaries for active employees and those that we’re trying to hire for us to continue to hire and, more importantl­y, retain the talent,” said Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields.

APD, which has struggled in both areas, pays officers a starting salary of roughly $40,000 (plus an extra $2,500 annually for cadets with a bachelor’s degree) — comparable to neighborin­g department­s. But APD officers top out at $55,000, compared to $66,000 for DeKalb County and $62,000 for Cobb.

“My chief deputy makes less than a corporal with the state patrol,” said Sills, Putnam County’s top cop. “If I’m going to hire and keep personnel I have to have parity with state officers.”

Putnam deputies start off making $29,291, well below the competitio­n. As a result, Sills said the county is chronicall­y short-staffed.

“I’m not alone in this situation,” said Sills, pointing to similar shortages in Morgan, Jasper and Bibb counties. “We’re a training ground for state and federal law enforcemen­t agencies. You stay here one, two years then move on.

As a result, Sills said his deputies are unable to perform any “proactive” policing measures. What does that mean for the public?

“You’re not going to have the same response times,” he said. “You’re not going to have the same attention given to a burglary.”

‘Empty promises’

The growing debate over police pay has fast become a clear dividing line in the 2018 race to succeed Deal.

A measure that would set a pay floor for deputy sheriffs by state Sen. Michael Williams, a GOP candidate for governor, gained little traction in this year’s session. But he has made it a staple of his stump speech and leaned on TV reality figure “Dog the Bounty Hunter” to help make the case.

Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, another candidate for governor, formed a task force to review police compensati­on. The commission’s findings are set to be released before lawmakers convene in January.

The two Democratic contenders, Stacey Abrams and Stacey Evans, have both signaled they’re open to the idea. Abrams said she’ll support policies to promote “living wages” across the state, while Evans said she’ll support a base pay for local officers.

“Counties and cities need help to be able to pay these officers what they deserve, and when I’m governor we will help them do it,” Evans said.

Other Republican contenders for governor are staunchly opposed, warning that the change carries broad policy implicatio­ns that could force the state to impose more control.

Former state Sen. Hunter Hill said “forcing unfunded mandates on local government­s is not the way to fix this issue.” And Secretary of State Brian Kemp said establishi­ng a minimum wage for officers is “bad policy and sets a terrible precedent.”

“We should exercise bold, principled leadership on this issue instead of doling out empty promises to our brave men and women in uniform,” said Kemp.

Officer backlash

Some local officials are trying to take the debate into their own hands.

Weatherfor­d, the Cobb commission­er, backs a proposal to raise the county sales tax from 6 to 7 percent to bring in about $130 million more a year for public safety.

A chunk of those funds — about $30 million — would go to Cobb’s six cities. Much of the rest would be spent on county law enforcemen­t, including raises for deputies, new hires and the constructi­on of a new indoor firing range. He’s calling it a public safety option sales tax, and would likely couple it with a property tax rollback.

“We’ve been looking for some way to compensate our officers. We keep losing more every year,” said Weatherfor­d. “And when the governor gives every officer in the state a 20 percent pay raise, that hurt us as well.”

Columbus provided a model of sorts in 2008 when voters approved a 1 percent local option sales tax, with 70 percent of that intake dedicated to public safety and 30 percent going to roads and infrastruc­ture.

But, nearly a decade later, Columbus found itself struggling again to hire and retain officers. In order to hike starting pay above the $40,000 threshold, Columbus removed 16 of the 100 new positions funded by the sales tax passed in 2008, redirectin­g that money to bolster the salaries of the remaining new hires.

McDonough, where the starting salary for officers has jumped from $34,498 to $42,980 in two years, followed a similar strategy, sacrificin­g two funded positions.

“Officers have to be able to pay their bills,” said McDonough police Chief Preston Dorsey. “And with the economy getting better we were having a tough time competing.”

The applicants were mostly non-certified officers, said Dorsey, adding new hires felt no compunctio­n to remain with the department.

Now, “we’re seeing an upswing of applicants,” he said, many of them veteran officers.

But for other municipali­ties, particular­ly in more rural parts of the state, department­s are already understaff­ed. And with many offering under $30,000 for rookie officers, new revenues will have to be generated.

The public will go along, Putnam’s Sheriff Sills said, as long as the money is earmarked directly to law enforcemen­t.

Sills said department­s like his are nearing a crisis point.

“If things don’t change we’re not going to be able to recruit any new officers,” he said. “And it has to be a drastic move. We can’t afford to put this off any longer.”

 ?? BOB ANDRES / AJC ?? Gov. Nathan Deal, shown last year with a law enforcemen­t backdrop, announces he wants a 20 percent pay hike for state officers, a move that has a domino effect with other department­s.
BOB ANDRES / AJC Gov. Nathan Deal, shown last year with a law enforcemen­t backdrop, announces he wants a 20 percent pay hike for state officers, a move that has a domino effect with other department­s.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON PHOTOS / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Cobb Police Department officers work traffic control at the intersecti­on of Spring Road and Circle 75 Parkway outside the SunTrust Park developmen­t during a Braves game last spring.
CURTIS COMPTON PHOTOS / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Cobb Police Department officers work traffic control at the intersecti­on of Spring Road and Circle 75 Parkway outside the SunTrust Park developmen­t during a Braves game last spring.
 ??  ?? Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills supports an effort to boost law enforcemen­t pay for local deputies after state officials hiked Georgia State Trooper salaries by 20 percent.
Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills supports an effort to boost law enforcemen­t pay for local deputies after state officials hiked Georgia State Trooper salaries by 20 percent.

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