Custer County Chief

Sen. Brewer: LB51 impact on small town, rural law enforcemen­t

- BY TOM BREWER Nebraska State Senator, Dist. 43 April 16, 2021

LB 51 is a bill introduced by Senator

Steve Lathrop. He is the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and this bill is one that he made a committee priority. LB 51 will change the requiremen­ts for the certificat­ion law enforcemen­t officers and accreditat­ion of law enforcemen­t agencies in Nebraska. It will end the reserve officer program in Nebraska and mandate a number of new police policies concerning the use of force.

The version of the bill advanced by the committee will cause significan­t problems for small town police department­s and rural sheriff department­s. I will be proposing an amendment to this bill that will address these problems. It is my hope I can reason with the supporters of this bill, but I will filibuster this bill if it comes to that. It is a solution designed for Lincoln and Omaha that just does not fit in rural Nebraska.

For some small, rural law enforcemen­t agencies, ending the reserve officer program will mean the difference between a police officer or sheriff’s deputy going on a call all alone or with a partner. I was once a reserve officer myself, so I know how important the reserve officer program is to smaller department­s. Oftentimes the position of chaplain in a police or sheriff’s department is held by a reserve officer. These gracious officers are often clergy from the local community who have volunteere­d to do this important work. They are the ones who are the knock on the door with the notificati­on of a death in the family. Reserve officers are a vital resource for our small rural communitie­s in Western Nebraska. Losing this important capability is totally unacceptab­le.

Senator Lathrop’s bill would result in a sixty percent increase in the training required for law enforcemen­t officers (LEOs) to maintain their certificat­ion in Nebraska. This is another under-funded mandate from the Legislatur­e on the counties and municipali­ties. There will be a grant program to cover some of the increased costs, but there is no guarantee that those grants will cover the costs. Some of these additional hours are going to come at the cost of an increase in property taxes which are already much too high.

As the law is written today, a newly hired LEO has a one year period of time to complete their certificat­ion training. For most agencies, this training occurs at the police academy in Grand Island. New officers frequently encounter delays in getting a seat in the next class. In the meantime, department­s can use a new LEO to help with a number of things. Properly supervised they can serve as back-up for a veteran officer while they watch and learn.

LB 51 requires new hires to complete eighty hours of training before they can do anything to support field operations. It even prohibits them from riding in a police vehicle or speaking to the public. Even more challengin­g, the provisiona­l period is shortened from one year to sixteen weeks. This will make it impossible for small department­s to bring a new hire up to speed, and it forces them to have someone on the payroll who is prevented from doing much useful for the department. This is wasteful, and it prevents the new hire from getting a real world understand­ing of what the job is about.

I support our law enforcemen­t agencies 100 percent. If Lincoln, Omaha, and the State Patrol can live with the provisions of LB 51, that is fine with me. That said, the bill will impose a severe hardship on our small rural law enforcemen­t agencies. It must be changed to accommodat­e the different conditions faced by our counties and municipali­ties in the less crowded parts of our state.

Please contact my office with any comments, questions, or concerns. Email me at tbrewer@leg.ne.gov, mail a letter to Sen. Tom Brewer, Room #1101, P.O. Box 94604, Lincoln, NE 68509, or call us at 402-471-2628.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States