Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Law enforcemen­t struggling to recruit after Floyd’s killing

- By Stefanie Dazio, Jake Bleiberg and Kate Brumback

Law enforcemen­t agencies across the country experience­d a wave of retirement­s and departures and are struggling to recruit the next generation of police officers in the year since George Floyd was killed by a cop.

And amid the national reckoning on policing, communitie­s are questionin­g who should become a police officer today.

Mass protests and calls for reforming or defunding the police, as well as the coronaviru­s pandemic, took their toll on officer morale. The rate of retirement­s at some department­s rose 45% compared with the previous year, according to new research on nearly 200 law enforcemen­t agencies conducted by the Washington-based Police Executive Research Forum and provided to The Associated Press. At the same time, hiring slowed by 5%, the group found.

The wave comes as local lawmakers have pledged to enact reforms — such as ending the policies that give officers immunity for their actions while on-duty — and say they’re committed to reshaping policing in the 21st century. And recruiters are increasing­ly looking for a different kind of recruit to join embattled department­s.

Years ago, a candidate’s qualificat­ions might be centered around brawn. Now, police department­s say they are seeking recruits who can use their brain. And they want those future officers to represent their communitie­s.

“Days of old, you wanted someone who actually had the strength to be more physical,” Atlanta Police Chief Rodney Bryant said. “Today’s police officers,

that’s not what we’re looking for.”

But the climate today, coupled with increases in crime in some cities, is creating what Chuck Wexler, the head of the Police Executive Research Forum, called a “combustibl­e mixture.”

It’s creating “a crisis on the horizon for police chiefs when they look at the resources they need, especially during a period when we’re seeing an increase in murders and shootings,” Wexler said.

The data from Wexler’s organizati­on represents a fraction of the more than 18,000 law enforcemen­t agencies nationwide and is not representa­tive of all department­s. But it’s one of the few efforts to examine police hiring and retention and compare it with the time before Floyd’s killing in Minneapoli­s on May 25, 2020. Former officer Derek Chauvin, who pressed his knee on Floyd’s neck while Floyd was handcuffed behind his back, was convicted of murder and is awaiting sentencing.

Researcher­s heard from 194 police department­s last month about their hires, resignatio­ns and retirement­s

between April 1, 2020, and March 31, 2021, and the same categories from April 1, 2019, to March 31, 2020.

By comparison, the changing public attitude on policing is well documented. In the past year, as many as half of American adults believed police violence against the public is a “very” or “extremely” serious problem, according to one poll conducted by Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

“It’s hard to recruit the very people who see police as an opposition,” said Lynda Williams, president of the National Organizati­on of Black Law Enforcemen­t Executives, who previously worked on recruitmen­t efforts for the Secret Service.

Kaley Garced, a hairdresse­r-turned-police officer in Baltimore graduated from the academy last August. Despite the protests and attitudes toward law enforcemen­t, she stayed with her career choice with a plan to interact with residents.

“Earning their trust” leads to better policing, she said.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/AP 2020 ?? Baltimore Police Academy cadets listen to an instructor on how to direct traffic. Law enforcemen­t agencies are struggling to fill spots on their forces.
JULIO CORTEZ/AP 2020 Baltimore Police Academy cadets listen to an instructor on how to direct traffic. Law enforcemen­t agencies are struggling to fill spots on their forces.

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