"When you're already maximizing your resources with grants and volunteers, when the money that you've been using to help offset shortages starts drying up, it's not just programs that go away; it's people," says Chief Joseph Polisar of the Garden Grove (Calif.) Police Department.
The grants that are available through Homeland Security cover technology and equipment, not personnel. Having served as his state's Homeland Security Advisor to the governor, Ron Ruecker, superintendent of the Oregon State Police, understands and agrees with this stance, but it doesn't help him obtain funding for more troopers.
"If you don't have the people, a parking lot full of cars isn't going to do you much good," Ruecker quips.
Michael Moore's controversial documentary, "Fahrenheit 9/11," publicized the budget woes of the Oregon State Police by capturing state troopers on film talking about how few of them were left to police the state. Although critics of the filmmaker say he sensationalized the issues to further his agenda, Ruecker can't fault Moore for his reporting on this point.
"The fact is that what appeared in the film might even be a rosier picture of the truth," he says. "There are times right now where we don't have 24-hour coverage in the Oregon State Police anywhere in the state, which is something I never thought I'd see in my career."