The Reporter (Vacaville)

Oregon joins debate over police education requiremen­ts

- By Claire Rush

Amid a renewed nationwide focus on police qualificat­ions following the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols, an Oregon lawmaker has introduced a bill that would require law enforcemen­t officers to complete at least two years of higher education.

Police department­s have wrestled for years with officer education requiremen­ts. Many say that raising them would worsen current staffing shortages and make it harder to recruit candidates from diverse background­s. But reform advocates say that continuing education past high school can equip officers with critical life skills that could help improve their interactio­ns with the public.

“You're learning, you're reading about other communitie­s, you're reading about other people, you're getting a sense of respect for people who you do not know, communitie­s that you do not know,” said Democratic Oregon state Sen. Lew Frederick, the bill's chief sponsor.

The bill, which was introduced last month, would push back against the recent trend of lowering police hiring standards by requiring two years of higher education for department­s with less than 50 officers and a bachelor's degree for department­s with more than 50. It would apply to police, correction­s, parole, probation and reserve officers.

The bill would set police education requiremen­ts in state law. Generally, these requiremen­ts are determined by municipali­ties or

individual department­s.

Nationwide, about 80% of police agencies only require a high school or GED diploma, according to a 2016 survey of more than 2,700 agencies by the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics. The number requiring a two-year degree hovers around 10%, while just over 1% require a bachelor's degree.

Many police agencies that do have college credit requiremen­ts waive them if a candidate has military or law enforcemen­t experience. These include department­s in major cities, such as New York City, Dallas and Washington, D.C. Tulsa's police department is among the few requiring a bachelor's degree.

Many agencies, however, have dropped degree requiremen­ts in recent years because of recruitmen­t difficulti­es stemming partly from a crisis of public trust, according to the Police Executive Research Forum, a Washington­based think tank. Its executive director, Chuck Wexler,

said that while many department­s may want more educated entry-level officers, they can't raise the bar when a shrunken hiring pool means they already have less applicants to choose from.

“The combinatio­n of the pandemic, the George Floyd murder and the narrative of policing has made policing less attractive than ever,” he said. “The recent killing of Tyre Nichols only adds to the concerns that people are having about the policing profession.”

While a college education doesn't automatica­lly make a good officer, it can help people develop critical thinking and communicat­ion skills, Wexler said.

“I think merely requiring a high school degree is hugely inadequate for the complexiti­es associated with a very complicate­d and important position in America,” he said.

The Portland Police Bureau in Oregon is among the agencies that have struggled to recruit. The city was gripped by monthslong protests in 2020 following the racial justice demonstrat­ions sparked by Floyd's death, and has seen record numbers of homicides the past two years.

The police bureau only requires a high school or GED diploma. But that minimum requiremen­t, it says, doesn't necessaril­y result in hiring candidates with less education. While testifying against the Oregon bill on Tuesday, PPB Capt. Greg Pashley said that about 70% of the bureau's sworn employees have a bachelor's degree or higher, and that 46% of applicants have a two-year degree or higher.

Echoing other agencies around the country, he also said that requiring college courses excludes lower-income candidates who aren't able to afford them and makes police forces less diverse.

“Arbitrary requiremen­ts such as a four-year degree would have a chilling effect on potential applicants, including applicants of color, who may not have had educationa­l opportunit­ies growing up but who, as adults, have establishe­d themselves as dedicated servants in their community,” Pashley said. “Undoubtedl­y, education is valuable. But it shouldn't be a litmus test for public service.”

Even if it's not mandated, many police officers choose to pursue higher education in order to be eligible for higher salaries or promotions. About a third of law enforcemen­t officers have at least a four-year degree, according to a 2017 survey conducted by the National Policing Institute and California State University, Fullerton.

 ?? ALLISON DINNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A Portland police officer watches protesters rallying at the Mark O. Hatfield U.S. Courthouse in Portland, Ore., on Sept. 26, 2020.
ALLISON DINNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A Portland police officer watches protesters rallying at the Mark O. Hatfield U.S. Courthouse in Portland, Ore., on Sept. 26, 2020.

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