The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Looking to hire 155 officers, DeKalb tries new strategies

Vacancies at area agencies prompt creative outreach.

- By Tia Mitchell tia.mitchell@ajc.com

Detective Lesa Robinson needs a tissue and a few seconds to compose herself.

She is in the middle of an exhibit hall at the Georgia Internatio­nal Convention Center and someone has asked her what it was like being a female officer patrolling the busy streets of DeKalb County. The memory of her first day riding alone gets her emotional, but telling the story of the first time she called for backup brings tears.

“The moment I asked for help, they all came,” she tells a group of women who have crowded around to hear her story and possibly follow in her footsteps. “If I had to do it all over again and choose profession­s all over again, I would choose DeKalb Police.”

A passionate and articulate recruiter, Robinson is the face of an agency looking to staff up its ranks quickly. The DeKalb County Police Department is looking to hire 155 officers this year, and it is not alone among local police agencies in search of dozens, if not hundreds, of new employees.

DeKalb and many others set up tables and unpacked freebies in hopes of attracting candidates during Congressma­n David

Scott’s 15th Annual Career Fair on Friday.

DeKalb is among the state’s largest and busiest police forces, meaning it can offer more career opportunit­ies and resources to employees. But that comes with

the pressure of working inside an agency that patrols an area with the state’s largest number of homicides and a murder rate second only to the city of Atlanta.

All of DeKalb’s public safety agencies are in need of new employees. The Fire Rescue Department is seeing veterans retire at a rapid pace and within each recruitmen­t class hired there are a handful of students that don’t make it to graduation. The Emergency 911 call center, the state’s busiest, also has rapid turnover and is financiall­y hindered by caps on the taxes used to fund its operations.

Still, the needs within the county’s police department are the top priority. And it is the same story for other law enforcemen­t agencies across the region.

Also attending Scott’s job fair were representa­tives from police department­s in Atlanta, Gwinnett County, Clayton County, Powder Springs, and Savannah. Atlanta Police Department says its goal is to hire 200 officers this year.

DeKalb will have to compete with all of these agencies to meet its aggressive goals of building up an agency that is stretched too thin. A December news release said that the number of police officers working in DeKalb had declined from 994 to 710 since 2012, a 28-percent drop.

It has been tough everywhere to hire officers in the years after protests in Ferguson, Mo., shined a light on issues in policing and the treatment of minorities. The economy is robust, and top applicants are taking less risky, higher paying jobs, the county’s new deputy chief operating officer of public safety, Joseph “Jack” Lumpkin, said.

“People who have the knowledge, skills and abilities to be police officers have a wide variety of other opportunit­ies,” Lumpkin said. “And in Georgia the compen-

sation and benefits are significan­tly different than in some of the northern states or in states where the unions are representi­ng police. So, it’s the competitio­n factor and how police are actually viewed by the community.”

The DeKalb Board of Commission­ers signed off on Thurmond’s proposal to set aside $7.9 million to pay the 155 new officers plus $500,000 to recruit them. Scouts are not only attending local events, they have also hit the road to places such as Jacksonvil­le, Fla., earlier this month and Savannah State University’s career fair this week.

The agency is trying to do things differentl­y, like a forum featuring female officers such as Robinson that resulted in a packed room. In addition to social media and advertisin­g, the agency is strengthen­ing its connection­s to churches in hopes of creating new pipelines for talent.

Detective Keith Lee stopped people as they walked past him in the convention hall, asking them if they ever thought about a career in law enforcemen­t. If they said they were too old or unqualifie­d, he gave them a flyer anyway. He told them they may know a family member or friend who fit the bill.

The department has even implemente­d a bonus program for DeKalb County employees. If they refer someone who is ultimately hired, they could earn $1,000.

DeKalb Police didn’t have to go looking for Tonika Arila, she was looking for them. Her husband, Karl, currently works overnights at a factory where the threat of injury and low pay has soured him on the work. He is trained in martial arts, has hunting skills and enjoys working out. Policing is for him, Tonika said, and she was eager to sign his name on a list of people wanting more

informatio­n while he chatted with a recruiter.

“I’m going to give it a go,” he said after a long conversati­on with Detective Maqsood Syed, another recruiter.

Finding enough qualified applicants to fill these open positions is only part of the battle. Keeping them on the force, especially after their initial contract ends and they become free agents, is a tougher. Plus there are retirement­s and burnouts to contend with, plus all the other reasons why people change careers.

Lumpkin wouldn’t provide the latest numbers because he said it could affect the safety of officers on the street, but he said the agency has been losing officers each year at a rate well above the 5-percent industry standard for attrition.

There are other police department­s near DeKalb with a lower call volumes and stress levels yet higher pay. During the economic downturn, DeKalb police and firefighte­rs also were required to pay more toward their pension and other benefits which further reduced the size of their checks.

Officers recently received a 3-percent pay raise that boosted the starting salary for recruits with high school diplomas from $38,151 annually to $39,295. Still, Cobb County and Atlanta police start new officers above $40,000.

Although the DeKalb County Fire Rescue Department’s staffing issues aren’t as dire, compensati­on and attrition has become an issue in that agency too. Lumpkin said department­s are always changing their pay scales so it’s futile to shoot for the top of the list, but DeKalb cannot linger at the bottom.

“We have the tougher job, so our salaries, compensati­on and benefits must be competitiv­e if not the best,” Lumpkin said. “And I hear from the CEO and the Board of Commission­ers a willingnes­s to go wherever they need to go to have the caliber of service that the citizens have a right to expect.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ ?? DeKalb County Fire Rescue Department recruiter Adrianne Ziyad talks with a potential recruit during Congressma­n David Scott’s 15th Annual Career Fair on Friday at the Georgia Internatio­nal Convention Center in Atlanta.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ DeKalb County Fire Rescue Department recruiter Adrianne Ziyad talks with a potential recruit during Congressma­n David Scott’s 15th Annual Career Fair on Friday at the Georgia Internatio­nal Convention Center in Atlanta.
 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ ?? DeKalb County Police detective Keith Lee (left) speaks with Daniel Townsend of Decatur (second from left), and Qunchez Childs (second from right) and William Burson (right), both of Atlanta.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ DeKalb County Police detective Keith Lee (left) speaks with Daniel Townsend of Decatur (second from left), and Qunchez Childs (second from right) and William Burson (right), both of Atlanta.
 ??  ?? DeKalb County Fire Rescue Department youth developmen­t administra­tor Annette Haygood speaks with a potential recruit during Friday’s fair.
DeKalb County Fire Rescue Department youth developmen­t administra­tor Annette Haygood speaks with a potential recruit during Friday’s fair.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States