The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

DeKalb police pay plan omits 20% raises

Skills, experience will determine increase, CEO says.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

A proposal to give DeKalb County police officers a huge 20 percent pay raise to improve crime-fighting appears unlikely to move forward.

Instead of across-the-board pay increases, DeKalb CEO Mike Thurmond said Tuesday he’ll eliminate pay disparitie­s and award raises based on skills and experience.

The new plan for improving first responders’ compensati­on lacks the impact of a sweeping pay bump, but Thurmond said he hopes to target the most deserving police officers, firefighte­rs and 911 personnel.

“We don’t want to be engaged in a one-off reactionar­y response. We need to have a more planned, more strategic approach to creating a more competitiv­e salary structure,” Thurmond said in an interview after briefing county commission­ers on his pay proposal. “We’re firm in the belief we can make a substantia­l impact.”

DeKalb’s police force has been shrinking for several years — from more than 1,000 to about 740 — as officers have left for department­s with higher pay, more benefits and less dangerous beats. The decline is also caused by new cities like Brookhaven and Dunwoody taking over police services from the county.

DeKalb pays early-career police officers $40,270 on average — lower than Atlanta and Fulton County but higher than Cobb and Gwinnett counties, according to DeKalb figures. The salaries of master police officers in DeKalb average $51,167, which is 5 percent below the market average.

The cost and details of Thurmond’s plan will be revealed with his mid-year budget proposal next week. The commission scheduled a July 11 vote on the budget.

Commission­ers considered a proposal for 20 percent pay raises for public safety employees before approving the annual 2017 budget in February.

But they didn’t pass the measure, which would have cost about $30 million a year, opting to wait until this summer before deciding on compensati­on.

Commission­er Mereda Davis Johnson said she initially supported the substantia­l pay increase, but she now favors Thurmond’s incrementa­l effort, and additional raises might be considered next year.

“The people that represent the agencies and the department­s have told me, ‘We want a more comprehens­ive approach,’” said Johnson, chairwoman for the commission’s Employee Relations & Public Safety Committee. “They work on the front lines . ... They know better than me how to approach this situation.”

Jeff Wiggs, president of the DeKalb Fraternal Order of Police, said he’s optimistic that Thurmond’s proposal will result in more consistent, fair and higher salaries.

“Pay is all over the chart” between officers and ranks, Wiggs said. “It can’t be fixed overnight; however, we’re hoping for a big step in the right direction and then continue in next year’s budget.”

But Faye Coffield, a former Atlanta police sergeant, said officers need substantia­l raises.

“Any time you get more money as an assistant manager at QuikTrip, you have a problem,” she said. “It’s crazy. You don’t want to pay people, but you expect them to risk their lives.”

 ?? NIESSE@AJC.COM MARK NIESSE / MARK. ?? About 50 police officers and sheriff’s deputies listened to DeKalb CEO Mike Thurmond’s budget preview Tuesday at the Maloof Auditorium in Decatur.
NIESSE@AJC.COM MARK NIESSE / MARK. About 50 police officers and sheriff’s deputies listened to DeKalb CEO Mike Thurmond’s budget preview Tuesday at the Maloof Auditorium in Decatur.

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