El Paso Times

Lawmakers fund rural Texas sheriffs

- Carlos Nogueras Ramos

ODESSA – Sheriff Andrew Aguilar’s struggle with keeping the streets of his West Texas county safe is constant.

The Crane County sheriff makes do with four deputies, two supervisor­s and one chief. Two deputies are volunteers from the local academy. The county’s cash-strapped budget spreads his department thin protecting 5,000 residents over 785 square miles, he said.

A new law aimed at increasing pay within sheriff’s department­s in rural Texas could help solve his staffing woes.

Senate Bill 22, sponsored by Muenster Republican Sen. Drew Springer, establishe­d a grant system that will boost rural law enforcemen­t efforts by $330 million. The amount of money a county receives annually is determined by its population size. Once awarded, counties can spend the money on raising minimum salaries and purchasing new equipment. The law similarly puts aside funds for prosecutor­s’ offices that are decided by the size of the jurisdicti­on.

“I think it’s one of the best bills to come out of Austin in a long time,” Aguilar said.

Before a county can use the money on gear, however, it must meet the minimum pay requiremen­ts for select law enforcemen­t roles – sheriffs must earn $75,000, deputies $45,000, and jailers $40,000.

The state’s comptrolle­r will review applicatio­ns and monitor the disburseme­nt and use of that money.

A raise in compensati­on could go a long way for department­s attempting to hire and keep staff on board, said Gillespie County Sheriff Buddy Mills. He said the money could make them competitiv­e with other law enforcemen­t agencies offering work for higher pay.

Loyalty, Mills said, is rarely a reason for toughening out low wages.

“The ability to move across the state for work is pretty easy to do,” Mills said.

Sheriffs across the nation have struggled to keep their rank-and-file filled, a 2022 report by the U.S. Department of Justice found. The number of officers has remained stagnant in the last three decades. Sheriffs department­s have tried filling that gap with civilians who perform administra­tive duties but don’t make arrests.

“Having someone stay with you is really amazing.”

Sheriffs across the nation have struggled to keep their rank-and-file filled, a 2022 report by the U.S. Department of Justice found. The number of officers has remained stagnant in the last three decades. Sheriffs department­s have tried filling that gap with civilians who perform administra­tive duties but don’t make arrests.

Rural areas don’t have much choice. Smaller Texas counties rely on a much smaller tax base to fund their coffers, ultimately yielding only a fraction of what bigger cities boast.

“It’s not that they don’t want to pay them. They just don’t have the means to do it,” Springer said.

 ?? IVAN PIERRE AGUIRRE FOR THE TEXAS TRIBUNE ?? A K-9 unit sits outside the Hudspeth County Sheriff's office in Fort Hancock on May 19, 2010. Rural Texas sheriff department­s are often financiall­y strapped due to a low tax base.
IVAN PIERRE AGUIRRE FOR THE TEXAS TRIBUNE A K-9 unit sits outside the Hudspeth County Sheriff's office in Fort Hancock on May 19, 2010. Rural Texas sheriff department­s are often financiall­y strapped due to a low tax base.

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