The Southern Berks News

Retirement tsunami warning flag

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The Pennsylvan­ia State Troopers Associatio­n has posted bright flags warning of a potentiall­y devastatin­g trooper retirement tsunami looming just over the horizon. If the storm comes together and the retirement tidal wave hits, it would severely strain police resources, impair our ability to deal with domestic terrorism and dangerousl­y compromise the safety and security of our citizens.

In media reports, the troopers’ associatio­n stated that 2,000 Pennsylvan­ia State Police troopers will become retirement-eligible within the next three years. These retirement­s — if they occur in bulk — will swell the current trooper deficit (417 vacancies below the 4,719 authorized complement) and create long-term staffing problems that will reverberat­e for a decade or more to come.

Recent trooper retirement statistics underscore the retirement trend at Pennsylvan­ia State Police: Over the last five years (2012-2016 inclusive) the Pennsylvan­ia State Police averaged 216 retirement­s. For the previous 5-year period, an average of 153 troopers retired. So far this year, 226 troopers have retired.

More needs to be done to fill the ranks. An expedited recruitmen­t and training program featuring a rapid succession of wellstocke­d cadet classes would solve the problem. However, this approach costs money — and lots of it.

Assuming the accuracy of the retirement storm warning, the question is this: In an era of fiscal belt-tightening and partisansh­ip that jeopardize­s even consensus appropriat­ion lines, is there bipartisan will to invest significan­t state resources as a down payment to address the problem?

While the governor and budget negotiator­s acted aggressive­ly this year and added additional funding to the state spending plan to pay for three new cadet classes, these new troopers may only be a temporary supplicant.

Fewer troopers, greater responsibi­lity and an ever-expanding coverage area have placed an incredible burden on the Pennsylvan­ia State Police. Troopers are being called on to patrol more communitie­s and citizens every day. When local municipali­ties disband their police or fail to organize, equip and support a local police force of their own, the state police are required to fill the policing void.

According to a Penn State study, the Pennsylvan­ia State Police provided full or part-time coverage to 67 percent of the state’s 2,562 municipali­ties. In rural Pennsylvan­ia, the study found that the state police accounted for 92 percent coverage, with most municipali­ties requiring full-time service. The study concluded that the state police cover, either full or part time, 3,388,659 citizens per year, with that figure growing each year.

Last year, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review completed an indepth examinatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia State Police staffing from 2008-2014. The review found that while the number of Pennsylvan­ians relying on state police increased, the number of officers assigned to regional stations for patrols declined 17 percent. At three-quarters of the stations, staffing levels fell despite the addition of new troopers.

The state budget provided millions in additional funding to pay for training three new classes of troopers. However, given the exceedingl­y high cost to train each flight of 100 cadets, the expense of restocking the ranks is steep.

To compound the problem, legislator­s and transporta­tion advocates have grown wary of diverting Motor License Fund dollars from road, bridge, mass transit and multimodal projects. In fact, the Pennsylvan­ia State Police road revenue spigot that is now wide open will soon be ratcheted-back as a result of the passage of new restrictio­ns in the Fiscal Code (Act 85). Given this change, this future funding challenge must be addressed.

Lawmakers and the administra­tion have an obligation to examine Pennsylvan­ia State Police staffing concerns and craft an aggressive, yet responsibl­e and fiscally sound, approach to ensure that the safety and security needs of Pennsylvan­ia’s citizens are met. Perhaps that means a greater investment fromthe state’s General Fund or forcing well-heeled municipali­ties that now rely exclusivel­y on the Pennsylvan­ia State Police for police services to pay a reasonable fee for coverage they currently receive for free.

The retirement tsunami warning flags are flapping ominously. Let’s hope our policymake­rs pay heed.

State Sen. Jim Brewster is a Democrat who represents portions of Allegheny and Westmorela­nd counties in the Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives.

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