|
Posted: 7:54 AM Oct 23, 2009
Blue Blues
Police departments and Sheriff’s offices throughout the state are slimming their ranks to make due with less money. The remaining officers are sharpening their skills to fight crime with a smaller force.
Reporter: Whitney Ray |
|
Police departments and Sheriff’s offices throughout the state are slimming their ranks to make due with less money. The remaining officers are sharpening their skills to fight crime with a smaller force.
Officers say training maybe more important now than ever.
From behind the wheel, or on foot, Florida’s law enforcement officers have to be ready for the unexpected.
Fighting crime is getting harder for dozens of law enforcement agencies being forced to cut staff to save money. Florida’s Highway Patrol alone has lost 157 positions. Gulf Stream Policeman Chris Hamori says officers are doing more with less.
“If you have a officers who can do two or three or maybe four different task, it can solve a lot of those problems, but you have to train those people to know how to do those tasks.
Nearly 400 officers are receiving advanced training at the Florida Public Safety Institute. The officers will use what they learn to teach training courses back home. Training Center Director Jim Murdaugh says it’s time for officers to sharpen their skills.
“When you have fewer officers, then you need to ensure that the skills those officers have are absolutely at the highest level you can possible have them.”
Which means, when budgets are cut, the least experienced officers are normally the first to go. It cost about 50-thousand dollars and takes a full year to train a new recruit. That’s time and money lost when budget cuts force layoffs.
Next year’s budgets are expected to be just as lean, likely forcing more cuts and making training all that more important.
Training needs have also changed over the past ten years. Many agencies now have squads specializing in cyber crime, child abductions, and intelligence gathering. Many police departments and sheriff’s offices have had to cut down on the specialized work to put more patrolmen on the streets.
Latest Comments
Yeah Charlie and Marti said Amendment One would not affect public safety, oops.
- Fatal Bicycle Accident on Highway 231
- Woman Blames Big Breasts for Declining DUI Breathalyzer Test
- Overnight Gulf County Crash Leaves Woman Dead
- Fla. Panhandle Deputy Sent to Jail in Battery Case
- Bald Eagle Recovering from Attack by Mysterious Culprit
- Panama City Murderer Still Awaits Execution
- Bare Knuckle Politics Over Prisons
- Video Shows Trolley Driver Crashing into Building
- Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Helps Vets Recover
- 16 Year Old Charged With Burglaries and Rapes
- Private Prison’s on Legislative Agenda
8 Comments - School Prayer Moving Through Florida Senate
8 Comments - Voters Approve Slots in Washington and Gadsden Counties
6 Comments - Bald Eagle Recovering from Attack by Mysterious Culprit
4 Comments - Original Tuskegee Airman Shares his Story and Thoughts on 'Red Tails'
3 Comments - Two Panhandle Counties Vote on Slots Tuesday
3 Comments









