The Mercury News

CHP’s first Black commission­er wants to make it reflect population

‘Diversity brings a different viewpoint, a different spectrum of thoughts’

- By Wes Venteicher

The California Highway Patrol’s first Black commission­er oversees a department that is whiter than the state, and he says he wants to change that.

The CHP’s uniformed officers were 63.6% white at the end of December, according to figures the department keeps. White people make up 37% of California’s overall population, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

In a recent interview after Black Lives Matter protests in Sacramento, Commission­er Warren Stanley said diversifyi­ng the police force could help bring it closer to the communitie­s it serves.

“Diversity brings a different viewpoint, a different spectrum of thoughts, and you want to reflect the community or the state that you serve,” Stanley said. “And you also want to make sure that people understand that we are their Highway Patrol. You can be a part of us, and we want to be a part of the community.”

Stanley repeatedly returned to the theme of community in the interview. He said he emphasized the theme in conversati­ons with protesters during and after the protests in Sacramento.

He shared a dramatic moment with protesters on June 6 when he waded into a group of people who had jumped a barrier outside the Capitol. The moment came during the second weekend of protests following the death of George Floyd, a Black Minneapoli­s man who died May 25 shortly after a police officer kneeled on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

“None of us agree with what happened to Mr. Floyd,” Stanley told the crowd. “That was not right. Totally unacceptab­le.”

Stanley said he invited a half-dozen of the protesters, whom he estimated were around 17 to 24 years old, to continue talking inside the Capitol. A week later, he and other officers met with the group again in a community center off of Mack Road in South Sacramento, he said.

“They wanted to be treated like first-class citizens, first-class people and to have their community policed in a fair manner, which — nobody has a problem with that,” he said.

The department’s officers patrol state and unincorpor­ated roadways and help local police department­s.

Stanley, 59, who worked his way up the CHP’s ranks in posts around the state, said the department has made progress in diversifyi­ng since he joined nearly four decades ago.

Deputy Commission­er Amanda Ray is the first African American woman to hold that position. He said Chief Malkiat “Sam” Samra is the first Indian man to hold the title of twostar chief in the department, three Field Division chiefs are African American and one is a woman.

“There’s diversity,” Stanley said. “Would I like to see more? Yeah. One of the things we’re always trying to do is recruit a diverse group of people that reflect the diversity of the state.”

Following whites, Hispanics were the second-largest group within the CHP at the end of 2019, making up 25.8% of the force compared to the 39% of the state, according to department and census figures.

Just 3.3% of the force was Black, compared with the state’s 6%, according to the figures.

Stanley said he also wants to recruit more women, who make up 6.3% of uniformed officers, compared to 51% of the state’s population, according to the figures.

Before the coronaviru­s interfered with in-person recruitmen­t, he said recruiters were visiting faithbased communitie­s in Los Angeles and expanding into more junior colleges around the state.

He said he often tries to recruit people he meets in his daily life at places like Home Depot, who have good interperso­nal skills and other qualities that would make them a good fit.

“A lot of it is one on one,” he said.

Over the last five years, the department’s share of white officers has decreased by 4.5%, and its share of Hispanic officers has gone up 3.2%. Its share of Black officers has stayed the same, while its share of female officers has decreased slightly.

The department is expanding its use of social media, with recruitmen­t pages on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube. It has an “Explorer” program that introduces 15- to 21-yearolds to ride-alongs with officers, DUI checkpoint­s, office work, physical fitness training, and other aspects of policing.

Studies on minorities in policing have been limited and mixed and often depend on incomplete data. The Highway Patrol’s focus on traffic also makes it different from local police department­s.

Stanley said the department is engaged in broad self-reflection that includes its own diversity.

“For all of us in law enforcemen­t, specifical­ly for the CHP, the only way to make things better is if we engage and we take a hard look at ourselves,” he said.

Stanley started his law enforcemen­t career in 1982 in the CHP’s central Los Angeles station, where for about a year he worked alongside his brother, also a CHP officer, he said.

Stanley is one of a few officers to have held every position from officer to commission­er, according to his bio. He said he was promoted to sergeant in 1993, then to lieutenant.

He worked out of the San Juan Capistrano office for a year before transferri­ng to CHP’s Border Division in San Diego, where he was an investigat­ive services coordinato­r.

He reached captain in 2001 and moved back to L.A., then was repeatedly promoted until former Gov. Jerry Brown appointed him commission­er in February 2018. Newsom reappointe­d him in February 2019.

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