Some respondents offered thoughts on specific causes for the hurdles police agencies—and consequently, academy instructors and in-service trainers charged with preparing them for the streets—face in the realm of recruiting and retention.
Dan Marcou—a law enforcement trainer with 33 years of experience as a highly-decorated officer and the author of numerous books, including "
Street Survival II, Tactics for Deadly Encounters
"—said that people in the profession are still working to undo the damage done by "a corrupt national media" in their depiction of officers nationwide following the deaths of Michael Brown in 2014 and George Floyd in 2020.
"This false narrative has created an environment where law enforcement officers in nationwide [are] besieged and unsupported inspiring them to retire early, change careers, or change agencies with a less toxic environment," Marcou said. "The narrative has also diminished the numbers of people wanting to enter the profession creating drought-like conditions in the recruiting pool."
Don Alwes—a 36-year veteran of law enforcement who now trains law enforcement officers around the country—agreed and said that society in general and policing in particular are "still recovering from the Ferguson/Floyd situations."
Alwes added, "Officers with less training in a career than a little league player in a season, are being criminally charged if not performing at the limits of human performance. Officers are attacked and killed at a rate we haven't seen in decades, if ever. LE has been left disillusioned and demoralized. We've lost a ton of officers too early, and few good people want to do the job."