In her relatively new position, Chief U. Renee Hall of the Dallas Police Department has announced a combined plan for recruitment and retention. One part is rewarding officers who recruit candidates with a new initiative called "Every Officer Is a Recruiter." "We're allowing all of our rank-and-file officers to participate in recruiting," explains Hall. "If they are successful in recruiting an individual that actually gets hired, then we're incentivizing that with days off."
Officers get two to three days off for each person they recruit who enters the academy, and another two or three days of time off if that person graduates. The idea is for officers and the trainees they usher into the hiring process to develop mentoring relationships. This program gives officers a feeling they have input into the recruiting process and a stake in growing the department's numbers.
Chief Hall also plans to start a pilot program to issue take-home patrol cars to officers who live in Dallas' high-crime areas. The idea is that the presence of police vehicles will affect crime and the agency's ability to fight crime in these areas, while providing officers a perk.
But if officers truly aren't interested in sticking around, an incentive isn't going to be enough to keep them at their department. That's why agencies worried about retention need to listen to what officers want and need to find their jobs personally fulfilling, says Michael Parker, a consultant and former commander at the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department.
"It is one of the most commonly omitted actions that could be addressed by chief executives at policing agencies today. Many 15- to 20-year veteran officers are feeling taken for granted and not listened to. One of the best things to do, is to listen to them," says Parker.