Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia lawmakers plan to push for higher police pay in 2023 legislatur­e

- BY STANLEY DUNLAP GEORGIA RECORDER

A quick survey of the salaries for police officers in rural Southwest Georgia found some officers started off earning $12.70 an hour, providing further insight into why so many local law enforcemen­t agencies are struggling to recruit new personnel and keep experience­d officers on staff.

In a fall meeting a panel of state lawmakers, police chiefs, sheriffs and state law enforcemen­t officials discussed the challenges facing their profession as Georgia ranks near the bottom of the nation in average law enforcemen­t pay. The House Study Committee on State and Local Law Enforcemen­t Salaries report could become the linchpin for new legislatio­n once lawmakers return Monday after the committee signed off on recommenda­tions granting local officers access to a statewide retirement plan, providing income tax breaks and encouragin­g city and county leaders to adopt a minimum salary of $56,000 to match the national average.

By comparison, the average salary for rural Southwest Georgia is about $35,000 per year.

In addition to a salary bump from local department­s, the study committee recommends the University System of Georgia Board of Regents should consider creating a law enforcemen­t bachelor’s degree and streamlini­ng the transfer of credits earned at police academies.

It is up to city and county officials to determine how much money officers and other public safety officials make working in local jurisdicti­ons. But the state can provide incentives like it did in 2021 with one-time $1,000 bonuses to nearly 81,000 police officers, firefighte­rs and other emergency responders and another bonus last year distribute­d from federal pandemic relief funds.

Committee Chairman Mike Cheokas, an Americus Republican, said he’s hopeful the report will lead to more ideas about addressing salaries at the state and local levels.

“We hoped that by getting this started, the ball rolling, shining some light on it, that the conversati­on will continue,” Cheokas said.

Brett Murray, who directs Southwest Georgia Technical College’s Law Enforcemen­t Academy, said that the police force shortages are especially challengin­g for administra­tors in rural communitie­s that lack the same resources as state agencies or in larger metropolit­an areas that can often offer more money and better benefits.

Although state lawmakers can’t directly influence the salaries paid in places like Jackson and Americus, other methods exist to help recruit and retain officers, including bonuses, funding profession­al developmen­t and allowing public safety employees to be covered by the same retirement benefits plan that would allow them to get hired by another agency without being penalized.

“There are places in south Georgia where the bean plant pays more than a police officer,” Murray said at a September committee meeting in Americus.

“We need applicants in Lumpkin, Georgia, in Webster County, Georgia,” Murray said. “We are losing the five-to-15 year officers fast. Those are the bread and butter, they’re the experience­d officers who protect our communitie­s.”

Deputies and officers who patrol the streets, work inside detention centers and perform other duties are also in short supply in Georgia’s larger cities as violent crime rates have spiked. As the Cobb County Police Department struggles to fill about 100 jobs, it was among the suburban agencies that offered better wages and benefits rather than solely recruiting at job fairs and posting more ads.

Fulton County Sheriff Patrick Labat suggested at a committee meeting last month that Georgia consider emulating states like Florida, where employees are able to earn interest on their monthly retirement benefits and have the option of receiving a lump sum payment or rolling over into another plan.

Adding local law enforcemen­t employees to a statewide retirement plan would take two years and require an actuarial study before legislatio­n could be passed.

 ?? STANLEY DUNLAP / GEORGIA RECORDER FILE PHOTO ?? A Georgia legislativ­e committee says incentives such as tuition reimbursem­ents and the establishm­ent of a state-run public safety retirement plan could be options to help address a shortage of police officers, especially in rural areas.
STANLEY DUNLAP / GEORGIA RECORDER FILE PHOTO A Georgia legislativ­e committee says incentives such as tuition reimbursem­ents and the establishm­ent of a state-run public safety retirement plan could be options to help address a shortage of police officers, especially in rural areas.

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