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View Full Version : A modest proposal for El Paso County



Zundfolge
08-29-2012, 08:28
No, we're not going to feed the children of those in Black Forest to those in Fountain.


I was listening to the radio on the drive in this AM and it looks like Sheriff Maketa wants a sales tax increase to fund the Sheriff's department. We can argue the merits of that later, but it did get me thinking that there is a HUGE waste of city/county resources in having both a Sheriff's Department AND a Police Department.

Why couldn't the CSPD be folded into the El Paso County Sheriff's Dept? Just look at all the administrative redundancies that could be eliminated (along with an over paid PD Chief). Certainly putting all our law enforcement assets under one roof would be a huge cost savings, not to mention eliminating resource wasting interdepartmental rivalries and such.

roberth
08-29-2012, 08:31
Stop making sense.[Beer]

The unspoken first job of government is to grow more government.

DD977GM2
08-29-2012, 08:33
I think that the idea of a both a Sheriff and Police Cheif are outdated positions of Authority.

When there was a larger rural population along with less mobility to get to and from the "country"
it was a necessity. With todays modern technolgies such as vehicles,cell phones etc
we can do with just a Police Department and not both.
Have substations that both Sheriff and Police Departments have and then you take
care of covering the rural areas.

cofi
08-29-2012, 08:36
i live in elpaso county and am like 35 miles outside of cs it is a different world out here i see a need for both agencys the sheriffs are much more laid back and firearm friendly imo

birddog
08-29-2012, 08:55
I think there was probably a time when it made sense to have individual entities but these days consolidation makes a lot of sense, and in more sectors than just police work.

Like you said it would sure reduce some repetitive duties and probably provide better working relationships.

Cman
08-29-2012, 09:03
To bad it will never happen. It's a good idea.

hollohas
08-29-2012, 09:04
i live in elpaso county and am like 35 miles outside of cs it is a different world out here i see a need for both agencys the sheriffs are much more laid back and firearm friendly imo

Might be able to still get away with just the Sheriff. Jefferson County has multiple offices including a mountain division. The officers from that office are used to dealing with rural issues, the officers from in the metro area are used to dealing with city type issues. Of course there are multiple PDs within that area too. I guess the problem with having only a Sheriiff or PD is that they have to enforce both city and county laws...I can see where that could get a bit problematic.

However I think this idea is very suitable in smaller communities...like Woodland Park.

jerrymrc
08-29-2012, 09:24
As long as the Sheriffs dept does not hire any of the CSPD I am all for it. [Coffee]

Ronin13
08-29-2012, 09:30
Funny Zund, I think the same could be applied to Golden/Littleton/Lakewood/Arvada... JCSO has a presence in the municipalities (well, unincorporated- which are very small areas). Simply re-drawing where city limits are due to growth would benefit well and cut spending on an overzealous budget. JCSO is a great LE Agency, but it does have a major redundancy in the cities of Jefferson County. I understand their presence and need in places like Genesse, Evergreen, Conifer, etc... but they have little to no presence in Morrison because Morrison has a PD.

I think having two LE Agencies in one location does lead to some problems and issues... Perhaps El Paso County will set the new standard for this if they were to follow your advice? [Beer]

ChadAmberg
08-29-2012, 09:31
I was thinking the same thing the other day, I would like to see CSPD folded into the Sheriff's dept, not the other way around though.

CrufflerSteve
08-29-2012, 09:52
I think the the legal idea of a Sheriff goes way back in common law to before the US. A Police force was more of a mid 19th century invention.

A major urban center could justify having it's own police force but smaller cities and towns are just in a 'Me Too!' situation when they create a police force.

Steve

OneGuy67
08-29-2012, 10:15
Interesting thought. It is being done in Broomfield, where they were a city within four counties until they became a city and a county by voter approval several years ago. The Broomfield PD has two sides to it; one side handles the municipal issues that normal municipal police departments handle and they have a detention side, which handles all the duties that are normally handled by a sheriff's department by statute. Both sides are under the Chief of Police.

Here is the problem with a merge. The Police are municpal officers, hired by the city to enforce city, county and state laws. The sheriff's office by statute is required to handle a number of things such as subpoena service and eviction, jails, etc. and have a secondary duty to patrol areas of the county that are not incorporated into any municipality. As seen years ago with the Arapahoe County/Centennial/Greenwood Village fiasco, municipalities provide more officers per population density than does a Sheriff's office, thus the amount of officers on patrol is greater in a municipality than in unincorporated areas. That is paid for by various taxes (sales, property, vehicle, etc) the citizens of the municipality pay to the city. The citizens in the unincorporated areas pay less taxes overall and the services they receive from the county are reflected in that. When Centennial became a city and began to collect all the various additional taxes, it then contracted with the sheriff's office for law enforcement services and the sheriff's office INCREASED their law enforcement presence in the city limits with additional officers, traffic officers, and the like. It didn't increase its presence in the unincorporated areas. The unincorporated areas of Arapahoe County didn't see a direct benefit from the increased officers working in the incorporated areas of Centennial. They may have seen an indirect benefit as the agency upgraded equipment for all its officers, had more officers on the street to provide backup to the officers working in the unincorporated areas, had more tactical officers, etc. If Centennial had decided to organize its own police department, the Sheriff's office would have lost half of its officers, a lot of money and would have been unable to upgrade a lot of their equipment as the area that would have remained unincorporated and needing patrol officers would have been pockets here and there between the municipalities and out east towards Byers and Deer Trail.

It wouldn't be impossible, but you would have to get they buy in of the citizens who live inside the city limits of Colorado Springs to agree to supplement their cousins living in the unicorporated areas as they pay into the pot differently.

flan7211
08-29-2012, 10:27
As long as we get rid of the PD. Sheriff's are at least accountable through election.

Circuits
08-29-2012, 11:43
Not gonna happen, and for more than just "petty political" reasons.

Sheriff is a position which exists as a result of the state constitution, and it's the sheriff's job to provided law enforcement for the entire county, counties being the first level of subordinate jurisdictions to the state government.

Police departments exist to enforce local statutes and such created by any lower level of government than a county, which also requires a grant of powers from the state. A municipality does not have to have a police department at all, but large subpolities, like CS, not only have police departments, but their own court systems and large legal codes in addition to those effectuated by the state and the counties.

The only reason there is a combined Denver PD and sheriff's office is that Denver grew to fill all of Denver county, and officially changed its government to that of a "consolidated city and county". Unless CS fills all of El Paso County (EPC), there will be no compelling reason to combine the sheriff's office with the PD, and the city has its legitimate and selfish needs separate from the county until such a thing occurs, if it ever does.

Since there are already subpolities other than CS in EPC, a consolidation like Denver cannot just happen, either, as it would take mergers and annexations by CS of all other local governments in order to take up all of EPC. Unincorporated areas of a county can be annexed by any subpolity that wants to take responsibility for them, but subpolities can only be annexed with their consent.

OneGuy67
08-29-2012, 12:03
Just to correct one point of yours, Circuits.

In the City and County of Denver, the police and the sheriff departments are two completely different entities with two different heads of the departments, two different unions who bargain two different collective agreements and both under the Manager of Safety.

The Denver Sheriff's department handle what is necessrily required under statute (court security, operate a jail, process service, impound lot and the like) and since there is no unincorporated areas of Denver, they have no patrol division, no real investigative division (other than for complaints out of the jail), etc. In fact, the sheriff's department has historically been envious of the police department over pay, benefits, certifications, uniforms, and respect. A few years ago, they changed their uniforms to look more like the police uniforms in order to vie for some respect from the public. They lag in pay and benefits compared to the police department. They do not have an elected Sheriff in Denver County; the Manager of Safety is the de facto sheriff and the agency is directly supervised by the Director of Corrections, who is also considered the Undersheriff.

According to their website: "The Denver Sheriff Department was created on December 2, 1902 with the creation of the City and County of Denver. Since there was no need for two law enforcement bodies within the same jurisdiction and the Denver Police Department was already performing the patrol duties in the city, it was decided that the Denver Sheriff Department would only perform the duties as defined by state law; meaning the Denver Deputy Sheriffs would be assigned to the courts and jails. This remains the primary function of the Denver Sheriff Department today."

Additionally, one does not need to be a POST certified officer to work at the DSD, but you will need to be POST certified if you want to work off-duty security.

Flatline
08-29-2012, 12:24
As long as we get rid of the PD. Sheriff's are at least accountable through election.

Not to mention that the majority of deputies that I've met have been decent guys, most of the PD is not.

Aloha_Shooter
08-29-2012, 15:58
Not to mention that the majority of deputies that I've met have been decent guys, most of the PD is not.

I think Terry Maketa is doing a bang-up job as Sheriff and would have no problems voting him a budget increase but I am disturbed by all these gratuitous slams against the CSPD. One of my Eagle Scouts is now an officer with CSPD and I've never had a bad experience with any of the officers there. Now, I haven't met anything near a majority of CSPD but I'd wager the folks making these generalized negative comments haven't either.

FWIW, I'll appreciate all of CSPD and EPSO as well as the first responders and firefighters until they show me a reason not to and even then I'm sure it'll just be individuals who are jerks rather than the whole department.

Flatline
08-29-2012, 18:09
I think Terry Maketa is doing a bang-up job as Sheriff and would have no problems voting him a budget increase but I am disturbed by all these gratuitous slams against the CSPD. One of my Eagle Scouts is now an officer with CSPD and I've never had a bad experience with any of the officers there. Now, I haven't met anything near a majority of CSPD but I'd wager the folks making these generalized negative comments haven't either.

FWIW, I'll appreciate all of CSPD and EPSO as well as the first responders and firefighters until they show me a reason not to and even then I'm sure it'll just be individuals who are jerks rather than the whole department.

I worked EMS in the county for a couple of years and that's just what I saw. It seems that most of the guys in PD who are good have all moved into operations or support. Patrol is who is in contact with common citizens the most.

On that note, I've never had a CSPD officer help with a patient in any way.
I've had several calls where the deputies where helpful and in one case managed to get us consent from the parents (who were defiant with us) to treat the SI daughter, who probably would have acted on her ideations if we hadn't gotten her to the hospital.

There are good LEOs and less than good LEOs on SO and PD, it just seems that the good ones work for SO in a higher proportion.

jerrymrc
08-29-2012, 18:45
but I'd wager the folks making these generalized negative comments haven't either.

In my case I lived in CS proper for 10 years and the county for 14. My comments are not generalized but my experience with both is why I said what I said.

AirbornePathogen
09-02-2012, 16:31
There's precedent for the idea, sort of. City of Centennial doesn't have a PD of their own, they contract with Arapahoe County SO to cover the city.

T-Giv
09-02-2012, 16:48
Sheriff's Offices are only required to operate the jail facility, they are not required to run a patrol division. El Paso SO could limit funds by closing down their patrol entirely and let CSPD expand some. That way both agencies would have their AOR and stick to it.