Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Investment in Fresno PD Will Protect Citizens, Boost Economy
Darius-Assemi
By Darius Assemi
Published 7 years ago on
August 31, 2017

Share


OPINION BY DARIUS ASSEMI
Fresno Mayor Lee Brand made good this week on his promises to hire a full-time independent police auditor who resides in Fresno and to appoint a Citizens Public Safety Advisory Board.
It is my fervent hope that John Gliatta, a former FBI agent and Fresno County Sheriff’s Office crime analyst, teams with the advisory board to bring more transparency to the Fresno Police Department and strengthen the bond between citizens and officers.
I commend the mayor, too, for his plan to eventually make Fresno PD 1,000 officers strong. This mission will require a great deal of leadership, courage and community support, but Fresno has the right ingredients to get it done.
You might ask, “Don’t we already have enough police officers?”
My answer: The numbers speak for themselves. More and higher paid officers are sorely needed and, when funded, they will make Fresno a better and safer city.

RESPONSE TIMES

Call response time is a basic measure of performance and workload. Here the Fresno Police Department lags seriously behind its neighbors.
According to Fresno PD records, average response time for the lowest priority calls is more than 16 hours.
By comparison, the Fresno County Sheriff’s Office reports times of about four hours for the lowest priority responses in Fresno/Clovis unincorporated areas. Clovis PD has an average of just 15 minutes for low-priority calls.
These differences are staggering. Many of us who have been the subject of a crime with a cold scene have experienced these extreme wait times firsthand.
Don’t get me wrong. The problem is not lack of effort by our officers. They are working their hardest every day. There simply are not enough of them to handle the call volume.
Nor are there sufficient officers to engage in the most effective form of policing. It’s commonly called “community policing” and it involves building strong relationships between officers and residents.
Unfortunately, Fresno police are too busy answering calls, chasing bad guys and investigating serious crimes to truly engage in community policing.
While the FBI recommends two officers per 1,000 residents, Fresno sits at about 1.3 per thousand. Using the FBI figure, we should have 1,031 officers. We have about 760 – despite being budgeted for 804 officers today and 825 in the next budget.
Why is that?
Despite initiatives by Police Chief Jerry Dyer to retain and recruit more officers, the city is losing prospective hires out of the police academy and veterans. They are joining other police agencies in the Valley and throughout the state. Perhaps the biggest reason is that the salaries paid Fresno’s officers trail other agencies.
Put yourself in the officer’s shoes. If you can earn more and not be racing from call to call, wouldn’t you look outside the Fresno Police Department?

You need only to look at the salary gaps between Clovis and Fresno police officers to understand the challenge Chief Dyer faces. As the chart shows, Fresno’s pay for rookie patrol officers trails that of Clovis by 16.2%. A newly promoted sergeant in Clovis makes 21.8% more than his Fresno counterpart.
So where do we get the funding to end the salary disparity and to add officers?
We grow the General Fund by expanding Fresno’s economic base. And, I might add, strengthening the economy already is one of the cornerstone goals of the Brand administration.
The only difference between what the mayor has proposed and what I envision is timing. By making earlier investments in public safety, we can accelerate economic expansion.
Even further, there is clear statistical and real-life documentation of the benefits offered by a more equitable balance between the number of officers and the citizens they serve.
A UC Berkeley and National Bureau of Economic Research study from 2012 demonstrated that while investment in individual protections (such as home alarm systems) saves money, community-wide spending on funding for officers is a better bargain —delivering a $1.60 return for every tax dollar.
Early investment in public safety will deliver a win-win for Fresnans in every neighborhood. Residents will be safer, local businesses will have the confidence to expand, and out-of-town companies looking to relocate will accurately see Fresno as a prime site.

What We Must Do

This is how our community can play a significant role in putting more officers on the street:

  • One, we must hold our elected officials accountable and ensure that funding designated for law enforcement is spent for that purpose.
  • Two, we must put our money where our mouths are and support reasonable, cost-effective proposals for improved public safety.
  • Three, our public officials must be willing to listen to the needs of the community and demonstrate the courage to propose those policies which may be initially unpopular, but will produce positive results.

Now is not the time for political posturing. Rather, it’s a time for meeting the compensation needs required to recruit and retain officers, stabilize the force and build an improved culture of excellence.
Our hardworking officers should be paid what they deserve for their loyal service and huge contributions to the community.  They should not lag officers in neighboring communities when it comes to providing for their families.
By putting Fresno first – and not politics –I am confident we can forge real change that cuts crime and strengthens our business climate.
Darius Assemi, a Fresno area builder, farmer and philanthropist, is publisher of GV Wire.

DON'T MISS

‘Double-Digit’ Improvement, 100-Day Plan: FUSD Interim Chief Her Outlines Her Plans and Goals

DON'T MISS

Armenian President Tours Fresno, Visits William Saroyan Gravesite and Museum

DON'T MISS

Fresno City College Names Dean Medallion Winners and Commencement Speaker

DON'T MISS

Predicting What Dyer Will Say During His State of the City Address

DON'T MISS

Teoscar Hernández’s 3 RBIs Propel Dodgers to 7th Straight Win

DON'T MISS

Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Pleads Guilty in Sports Betting Case

DON'T MISS

Benson Honored Again as Bulldogs Head to NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships

DON'T MISS

Merced County Leaders Vote to Close Two Fire Stations: ‘We’re Moving into Hard Times’

DON'T MISS

Your PG&E Bill Could Be Going Up. Vote Is Thursday.

DON'T MISS

Chris Tomlin, Boots in the Park, and Sandra Bernhard Headline Mother’s Day Weekend Options

UP NEXT

Proud to Be an American: The Oft-Forgotten Red, White & Blue 1972 Fords

UP NEXT

Wired Wednesday: Mental Health Access And Medicaid’s Exclusions

UP NEXT

Fresno Area Elementary School Teams With Quiq Labs for STEAM Exploration

UP NEXT

Watch: Israel’s Oversized Influence in American Elections

UP NEXT

CA Restaurants Shouldn’t Be Shocked That ‘Junk Fees’ Ban Applies to Them

UP NEXT

CA Limits How Police Respond to Protests. Why Were Bean Bag Shotguns Used at UCLA?

UP NEXT

Trump Surrogates Make a Dangerous Call for China Regime Change: Fareed Zakaria

UP NEXT

Turbocharged Titans: How the Porsche 934 and 935 Dominated the Track for 50 Years

UP NEXT

After Losing Population in Recent Years, California Grows Again. Is That a Good Thing?

UP NEXT

Assemblymember Soria Dodges Questions About Defamation Lawsuit

Predicting What Dyer Will Say During His State of the City Address

9 hours ago

Teoscar Hernández’s 3 RBIs Propel Dodgers to 7th Straight Win

9 hours ago

Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Pleads Guilty in Sports Betting Case

9 hours ago

Benson Honored Again as Bulldogs Head to NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships

10 hours ago

Merced County Leaders Vote to Close Two Fire Stations: ‘We’re Moving into Hard Times’

10 hours ago

Your PG&E Bill Could Be Going Up. Vote Is Thursday.

Business /

10 hours ago

Chris Tomlin, Boots in the Park, and Sandra Bernhard Headline Mother’s Day Weekend Options

10 hours ago

RFK Jr. Says a Worm Ate Part of His Brain, but He’s Better Now

11 hours ago

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Challenges Donald Trump to Debate at Libertarian Convention

13 hours ago

Do You Love the Holiday Classic ‘Home Alone’? This Is Fresno’s Chance to Remake It.

13 hours ago

‘Double-Digit’ Improvement, 100-Day Plan: FUSD Interim Chief Her Outlines Her Plans and Goals

Fresno Unified’s new interim superintendent met with reporters Wednesday afternoon to talk about her life story, her longtime connecti...

6 hours ago

6 hours ago

‘Double-Digit’ Improvement, 100-Day Plan: FUSD Interim Chief Her Outlines Her Plans and Goals

8 hours ago

Armenian President Tours Fresno, Visits William Saroyan Gravesite and Museum

Local Education /
9 hours ago

Fresno City College Names Dean Medallion Winners and Commencement Speaker

9 hours ago

Predicting What Dyer Will Say During His State of the City Address

9 hours ago

Teoscar Hernández’s 3 RBIs Propel Dodgers to 7th Straight Win

9 hours ago

Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Pleads Guilty in Sports Betting Case

10 hours ago

Benson Honored Again as Bulldogs Head to NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships

10 hours ago

Merced County Leaders Vote to Close Two Fire Stations: ‘We’re Moving into Hard Times’

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend