Title: Boise Police Local
1Boise Police Local 486
- Presentation to
- Boise City Council
- February 1, 2005
2Presentation Objectives
- Help the Mayor, City Council, and negotiating
team understand the unions perspective on
compensation issues - Demonstrate that the current police force is
highly productive, efficient, and self-motivated - Provide evidence of the value-added that comes
with a respected police force - Show that the City of Boise has the ability to
fund more appropriate wage increases
3Boise and its Five Peers
The five cities used in the search for the new
police chief all have about the same population.
4Boise Police Show Measurable Results
The six cities have very different crime rates,
with Boise the lowest in both categories.
The five peer cities average 226 of Boises
violent crime rate, and 167 of Boises property
crime rate.
5Boise Police are productive!
The low crime rates are accomplished with a low
number of officers per 1,000 population. Only
Eugene has a lower ratio.
Idaho Average 1.8 officers/1,000 U.S.
Average 2.3 officers/1,000
6These low staffing rates have been falling for
some time
7City-Initiated Annexations seem to exacerbate
staffing shortfalls
- City-driven annexations are much larger
- Example Victory Rd adds 5,040 population,
larger than most Idaho towns, requiring 6-7 new
officers - 13-25 month lag to receive property tax revenues,
longer for sales tax sharing - Authorization hiring of new police may lag more
- Service requests begin immediately
- Police carry the burden of annexation
8Boise Police are Underpaid
The low crime rates are also accomplished with
low salaries. Boise has the second lowest pay
rate.
9Boise Police Base Pay Lags Peer Cities by 6
10Salt Lake has lower pay, but it has the highest
number of officers.
11And crime rates in Salt Lake are twice that of
Boise.
12Three of Boises peer cities have a higher cost
of living and two lower.
13Lower Pay Rates and Rising Housing Costs Make
Officer Residence in Boise More Difficult
14Meanwhile, Boise Executive salaries have risen
several times faster than police pay
15Conclusion
- While the cost of living is about the same in
Boise as in the five peer cities, - Crime rates are significantly lower,
- With fewer officers per population,
- And at a lower pay rate.
- A Productive, Effective Police Department
Deserves Better!
16Boise has offered all its employees a 2.25 cost
of living pay increase.
- Do Police Officers deserve more?
17Community-Oriented PolicingContributes a Large
Part of Boises Success
- The success of community policing relies in turn
on the volunteer efforts of its police officers. - Much of the Citys coverage of police in annual
reports, budget documents, and web site focuses
on these volunteer successes - Lets take a look at what police officers are
contributing of their own volition during their
free time
18Police Activities League (PAL)
- Raft Along features 65 officers and over 700 kids
- Raft Along may be the biggest kids river float in
the country. Now in its 7th year, with Cascade
Raft Co and several other outfitter and
businesses contributing.
19PAL Continued
- Pack Along is a more intensive 3-day horsepack
for at-risk youth, in its 6th year - Hook A Kid on Golf conducts 4 clinics at Falcon
Crest for over 150 youth
20PAL Continued
- SWAT Challenge pits officers against over 300
high school students in friendly competition - Building connections along with healthy
bodies - Youth Hunter Program is new in 2005 will mentor
children of single parents in firearms and
archery training and hunter ed - Mike Perkins leads all these program
21PAL Racing Program
- Started by PAYADA 11 years ago
- Led by Officer Greg Eisenbeiss
- 2 cars compete against kids at Firebird and
elsewhere - Events include Jet Wars, High School Drags, and
the Halloween Classic - Displayed at local parades, fairs, and events
- Anti-drug safe racing message carried to
thousands each year
22PAL Jonny Law Rock Band
- Officer Kent Lipple and his band take a variety
of Healthy Choices messages to school
assemblies and events. - They reach over 6,000 kids each year.
23PAL Bigs Blues
- Links Boise Police with 50 kids on Big
Brothers/Sisters waiting list - Organized outings to Steelheads Hawks games,
Roaring Springs, Boondocks, Pojos and others - Charity B-ball and bowling raise for programs
- Officer Jermaine Galloway leads 30 volunteer
officers in this mentoring program
24Thats not all
- Boise Police Association Shop with A Cop 30-50
officers help 60-120 at-risk kids buy presents
for their families, 10-17,000 raised each year,
Officer Dave Smith leads - BPD Fishing Tournament Officers donate 1,000
for this event featuring about 15 officers and 50
kids - BPD/BFD Guns Hoses charity hockey game raised
1,500 for local MADD chapter - Mark Stall Golf Tournament raised 6,000 for
scholarships for families of deceased
police/fire/paramedic officers
25And Dont Forget
- Special Olympics--15,000 helps 2,000 athletes,
raised through a variety of events, including - Cops N Lobsters
- Applebees Tip-A-Cop
- Law Enforcement Torch Run
- Parent Project- Resource Officer Dick Baranco
offers parenting classes through churches upon
request - Bicycle Program Officer Alan Cavener buys bikes
at city auctions, refurbishes and provides to
kids, about 25 per year over last two years,
self-funded - Baker to Vegas Police Relay Run
- Womens Fitness Challenge
- Numerous other community functions, e.g.
fingerprinting
26Boise Police 2004 Volunteer Totals
- Over 300 officers involved
- About 3,600 hours of officer volunteer time
- Nearly 2,000 participants and
- thousands of spectators and
- affected families.
- Estimated 43,500 raised for
- charities, plus large corporate
- in-kind donations to sponsor
- events.
27Key Policy Questions
- To what extent are police volunteer programs
critical to building community relationships, to
promoting healthy youth life choices, to putting
a human face on our police, and to the Citys
success with community policing? - Do any other city departments besides police and
fire engage in this level of direct volunteering? - What message are we sending police, via our pay
policy, about our respect and appreciation for
their community service? - Where is the tipping point where our pay policy
begins to affect participation in volunteer,
extra-curricular programs?
28Other Reasons Police Deserve Special Treatment
- Long training period (9-18 months) for sworn
officers means the transactions costs of employee
turnover are high. - Sworn Officers carry the burden of lethal
force. (Idaho Statesman) - No winners in a Matthew Jones incident
- Officers can be plunged into life-ending
decisions at any moment, even when off-duty - The burden of past incidents is carried
throughout life - Officers at risk in a highly dangerous and
stressful profession - Families of officers carry these burdens as well
- Is Boise approaching a second tipping point
with gang violence coming from the west?
29Meet Some of Boises Unsung Heroes Who Risk Life
Limb
- January 13, 2005 Officer responds to shots
fired call, suspect points gun at officer,
officer fires and misses, after a lengthy
standoff, suspect shoots himself - November 30, 2004 Suspect robs bank in SE
Boise, shoots at an officer, holds an elderly
couple at gunpoint until surrender
Officer Tom Miotke
Officer Brek Orton
30- February 28, 2004 Officer makes traffic stop,
suspect pulls handgun and shoots officer 3 times,
suspect later arrested - January 30, 2004 Officer accosted in parking
lot, ends up fatally shooting suspect
Officer Derek Whipps
Officer Jeff Dustin
31- April 9, 2003 Multiple officers pursue two
suspected armed robbers through town, are shot
upon, and fatally shoot suspects on airport
runway. - January 22, 2003 Officer responds to domestic
violence call, suspect drives over curb to hit
officer with car, officer shoots and wounds
suspect. - 14 additional incidents of aggravated assaults on
officers in recent years. - And dont forget numerous accidents and minor
injuries incurred during pursuits, breaking up
public and domestic disturbances, drug busts, and
generally keeping the peace.
Officer Todd Ducharme
32But can the city afford to pay wages commensurate
with the service and productivity they are
getting from their police force?
33How Much Revenue is Needed?
- 1 raise for Police costs 179,000
- City offered 2.25, budgeting 595,000,
retroactive to 4/1/2004 - Union seeks 4, an increase of 1.75
- Requires 313,000 more for FY2005
- Or 470,000 more to 4/1/2004
- Here are 3 ways to cover this added cost
34A Word about Revenue Projections
35Option 1 Increase Sales Tax Projection
- City projected 2.5 gain for FY2004
- Came in at 6.1
- FY04 actual FY05 p
- Current projections FY2005 -.6 FY2006
3.5 - 11 growth in Boises last two quarterly payments
36Lets Get More Realistic!
- State projects 7.7 and 4.3 increase in state
sales tax revenue sharing - Based on econometric model of states economy
actuals exceeding these forecasts - Even at 2/3 of state increase (5,3), 600,000
new revenues can be budgeted
37Option 2 Boise Can Obtain Sales Tax
Revenue-Sharing Gain from Population Adjustment
- COMPASS estimate for 2003 195,913
- (200,062 in 2004)
- Census estimate for 2003 190,117
- Uncounted population 5,796
- Sales Tax Revenue Sharing
- Per capita based on Oct 2004 27.75
- Potential Revenue Sharing gain
- 5,796 x 27.75 160,839
- Boise needs to proactively seek annexation gains
from Census, otherwise wait til 2011
38Option 3 Revise Spending Priorities
- Budget is the Citys best expression of policy.
Priorities can and do change. - Example Repair Maintenance Backlog 3.75
million arbitrarily spread over 3 years Mayor
just recommended additional 1 M in FY04 and
750K in FY05. Most of the improvements are for
parks. - A Reallocation to police salaries is within City
Councils grasp
39Conclusion
- City added to decisionmaker skill set in areas of
finance and policy, but what about personnel
management? - What is meta message inside actions like
- Lower pay for superior crime rates to peer cities
- Low authorized staffing levels and many unfilled
positions - Police being stretched to cover annexed areas
- Excessive executive pay increases
- City claims credit for police volunteer work,
but hires outside labor negotiator for 37,000 - City goes outside successful force for new chief
- How high a city policy priority is public safety?
- Is a fight for 470,000 (you already have
available to you) in Boises best interests?
40Note The rate is calculated by dividing the
number of sworn police officers by the total
population. It is presented on a "per 1,000"
basis. Sworn officers meet the following
criteria they are working in an official
capacity, they have full arrest powers, they wear
a badge (ordinarily), they carry a firearm
(ordinarily), and they are paid from governmental
funds set aside specifically for payment of sworn
law enforcement respresentatives. Some counties
did not report their numbers for the year. 2001
and 2002 estimates of total population have been
updated per the Census Bureau's updates. NA Not
Reported or Not Available. Source 1997-2002
Federal Bureau of Investigation, Uniform Crime
Reports, (http//www.fbi.gov/ucr/ucr.htm)
41(No Transcript)