washington law enforcement recruitment and retention

17
Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention Practices, Opportunities, and Recommendations WCMA Conference Morning Session May 4, 2018 Susanna Hans and Bucoda Warren

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Page 1: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Washington Law Enforcement

Recruitment and Retention Practices, Opportunities, and Recommendations

WCMA Conference Morning Session May 4, 2018

Susanna Hans and Bucoda Warren

Page 2: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

What brings us here today

• Evans School Student Consulting

Lab contract with the Association

of Washington Cities

• Not the final report, looking for

feedback from the Manager’s

perspective

Page 3: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

53%

27%

20%

Law Enforcement Officers in Washington

Workforce Eligible to Retire Today Eligible to Retire within 5 years

Share practices in use across Washington and nationally

Find new and innovative solutions to recruitment and retention issues

Navigate changing environments and potential challenges

Page 4: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Law Enforcement Agencies in Washington

• Public Safety Testing and application

3 Months

• Oral boards, background check, other hiring requirements

3 Months• Police academy

6 Months

• Field training

3 Months

272 Law Enforcement

Agencies

Page 5: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Wages in

Washington

• $78,600 average annual

salary for Washington

LEOs, 4th highest in

the nation

• Ranked 15th highest

cost of living by

“GoBankingRates”

Page 6: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention
Page 7: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention
Page 8: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Tukwila Police Department

• 77 Officers

• 3.94 Ratio

Fife Police Department

• 30 Officers

• 3.03 Ratio

Lakewood Police Department

• 96 Officers

• 1.63 Ratio

Sequim Police Department

• 19 Officers

• 2.69 Ratio

Poulsbo Police Department

• 17 Officers

• 1.67 Ratio

Port Angeles Police Department

• 31 Officers

• 1.61 Ratio

Port Orchard Police Department

• 23 Officers

• 1.67 Ratio

Yakima County Sherriff ’s Office

• 55 Officers

• .63 Ratio

Clark County Sherriff ’s Office

• 134 Officers

• .61 Ratio

Thurston County Sherriff ’s Office

• 83 Officers

• .59 Ratio

Washington Average

• 41 Officers

• 1.65 Officer/1,000 Citizen Ratio

Page 9: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Survey Findings

27% of officers surveyed have

considered leaving their department for

another

However, 50% of officers have

considered leaving the profession

completely

• Most officers are happy and feel valued at

their departments (70%+)

• A large number of officers are recruited and

recruit based on word of mouth discussions

(80%)

Page 10: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Interview Findings

Organizational Culture is Key

Passive vs Active Recruiting

Agency Loyalty

Recruiting from the same pool

“I would rather run a department understaffed than to hire someone who is a bad fit for us.”

Page 11: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Analysis

There are both opportunities to innovate and opportunities to avoid challenges by getting ahead of the problem

• Most agencies rely on the Public Safety Testing list Challenge: Lack of recruiting

pool diversity

• Without active policies departments will be unprepared to replace retiring officers, recruit new demographics, and retain current officers Challenge: Passive R&R

External Threat: Economic Climate

External Threat: Perception of Law Enforcement Agencies

Page 12: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Recommendations

Page 13: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Develop an Employer Brand & Live the Brand

in Practice

• A strong feeling of

appreciation by the

community for the work

officers do builds loyalty to

the community

• Inform community of police action quickly, follow up with citizens, and keep them engaged with who you are via social media

Maintain a strong social media and community Presence

• A simple way for citizens to engage officers and both bring concerns and learn from the departmentCoffee with a Cop

“Not as many people see policing as an

honorable profession to serve. This needs

to change.“

Page 14: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Begin Active Retirement Planning

• Begin recruiting to replace retiring officers before they are eligibleKnow when officers are

eligible to retire

• Allow for a bit of overlap when possible so that new officers can learn from those retiring Bring in new officers early

• Proactive (instead of reactive) preparation for retirements will help keep

staffing levels appropriate and will help avoid a disruption should plans

change and an officer retire early.

Page 15: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Target Non-traditional Applicants

• Easier for women to approach, representation builds more confidence for applicants and entry level officersUse female recruiters/trainers

• Female sports teams that may want that team comradery after collegeTargeting new pools

86%

14%

Law Enforcement Officers by Gender

Men

Women

Female officers resort to force & deadly force less often than male colleagues (11% vs 30%)• Based on a Pew Research Center survey of 8,000

officers in departments of at least 100 officers)

Page 16: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Adapt to a Changing Workforce Demographic

• Allows officers to do more and be more engaged, and increases experience of officers across department

Rotational Special Unit Assignments

• Consider tattoos, and rising student debt in background checks for exampleModify Hiring Standards

The youngest Millennials are

around 22 today

Gen Z will be the next future

demographic to consider

Page 17: Washington Law Enforcement Recruitment and Retention

Wrapping Up

Feedback from stakeholders

Finish final report and presentation

Give presentation, turn in report

Report materials given to AWC

Today

June 11

June 1

2-3 weeks