Police-Community Collaboration: America’s Public Safety Lifeline
Over the past two years, I have addressed the criticality of positive police-community relations in my columns for the Epoch Times, and respectfully encourage a review of these articles.
Although these articles honestly address police-community controversies, they always provide solutions and accentuate the positive by encouraging a unity of effort since protecting our communities is a shared responsibility.
America must rise to the occasion with an unwavering commitment to facilitate police-community collaboration, the lifeline of public safety.
Our communities deserve positive police-community relations to protect our way of life, values, and democracy. Failure is not an option, as without this cohesiveness; the results are disorder, chaos, and anarchy.
Police-Community Relations Demand Reform
Police departments must be continually collaborative and this is a time for transformational reform, ignited by a proper understanding of the principles of community policing.
Community policing must not be a superficial catch-phrase but expressed through a police departments personality and concrete initiatives in the community.
The responsibility is not incumbent on police departments alone but on all members of the community who have responsibilities of building bridges with law enforcement.
America’s Youth: The Heart of Community Policing
It has taken generations to get to where we are and America needs the youth as catalysts to renew the nation.
America’s youth will be the heart of transforming police-community relations as they are the irrefutable future of our nation.
Our youth must be the heart of community policing initiatives and we must be earn their trust and inspire their dedication to society.
A positive law enforcement presence as protective guardians is critical in our schools and communities. This presence must be manifested with initiatives including youth police academies, school resource officers, youth award assemblies, public safety expositions, police athletic leagues, police-youth mentoring, character education programs, and community action teams.
These actions teams, inspired by character education programs in partnership with the police, demands sensitivity to the most vulnerable in society including the homeless, sick, unemployed, elderly, and the poor.
Police must have a heightened sensitivity that their mission to protect and serve demands earning the respect of youth. This mission demands an unwavering determination to inspiring youth through positive encounters.
There must be an enhanced dedication to youth in communities that have been wounded by police controversies as well as in neighborhoods adversely impacted by poverty, unemployment, gangs, broken families, dilapidated schools, and substance abuse.
There is hope for healing in our communities and police are in privileged positions as ethical protectors to enhance community relations that will be intensified by a focused concern for the young. Police have their role with assisting communities to renewal; by inspiring youth as models of character, ethics, and leadership.
Young people are impressed by authenticity, empathy, and kindness as these are qualities that will inspire them to be citizens of character.
Law Enforcement Dangers Deserve Community Support
Aside from community policing initiatives, the dangers of violence in our communities and against law enforcement officials deserve community support.
According to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund (NLEOMF), there are over 900,000 law enforcement officers dedicated to serving communities throughout the United States.
This dedication has a painful price with over 60,000 assaults against law enforcement each year and nearly 16,000 injuries.
In 2016, eight police officers have already been killed by firearms-related incidents, a staggering 700 percent increase from this time last year.
America must appreciate these sacrifices, and all dedicated to protecting our communities and democracy. Our dedicated police officers are a national treasure and we must be eternally grateful for their courage, sacrifices, and service.
21st Century Policing Principles
In my article titled “Principles of American Policing” for the May 1, 2015 edition of the Epoch Times, I developed Nine Principles of American Policing to enhance dialogue, communication, and trust between police and communities.
These principles, inspired by the timeless teachings of Sir Robert Peel, father of modern policing, include the following:
• Being pro-police and pro-community are inseparable, indefatigable, and pre-eminent. Police must at all times remain fully committed to protecting and serving the public through character, ethics, and leadership that is total and wholehearted. Police must be guided by a moral compass that honors the community, Constitution, and Bill of Rights.
• Respect must be the heart of the police and it must be unwavering for the profession, colleagues, and community. Respect can only be earned through integrity, accountability, and transparency. These qualities build trust, legitimacy, and collaboration.
• Police require a discerning recruitment process, education credentials, and ongoing training/certifications, including constitutional policing, diversity, civil rights, race-relations, violence prevention, community policing, crisis management, ethics, leadership, gangs, private security, and use of force.
Complementing these principles is the “Final Report of the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing,” also released in May, 2015.
The pillars of this report include building trust and legitimacy, community policing and crime reduction, training and education, and officer wellness and safety.
The report recommends that “law enforcement culture should embrace a guardian mindset to build trust… and establish a culture of transparency and accountability.”
Final Reflections
Community policing must be infused into law enforcement agencies throughout the nation as it builds positive police-community partnerships.
When community policing is properly understood and cultivated, we are on the path to reawakening the nation by safeguarding our communities, promoting the dignity of all, and inspiring our youth, the future of America.
More
The 21st Century Cop: Vigilance, Community, Protecting America
Police in Schools: Safeguarding America, Building Character
Policing Dangers Demand Community Collaboration
Policing Demands Ethical Sentinels
Police-Community Crisis: Rise to the Occasion
Transforming American Policing: A Defining Moment
Police-People Unity: All Lives Matter
Policing in America: Protect, Respect, Community
Respect: The Heart of the Police Officer
Note Well
Linkedin: Vincent J. Bove Consulting, Speaker Services, Publishing
Join Vincent’s Linkedin Group: The Sentinel: Reawakening the Nation
Facebook: Vincent J. Bove Consulting, Speaker Services, Publishing
As authored for Vincent’s weekly column titled “Reawakening the Nation” for the Epoch Times, 35 countries, 21 languages and growing.
Photos
1. NYPD officers assisting visitors in Times Square, Oct. 15, 2015. (Vincent J. Bove)
2. NYPD Mounted Unit in the Plaza Hotel, Fifth Avenue and 59th Street, prior to Pope Francis motorcade, Sept. 24, 2015. (Vincent J. Bove)
3. Ferguson Police officer Greg Casem and Sergeant Dominica Fuller console a mourning child during a candlelight vigil held in honor of Jamyla Bolden in Ferguson, Mo., on Aug. 20, 2015. (Michael B. Thomas/Getty Images)
Labels: Collaborative Policing, Community Policing, Criminal Justice, Epoch Times, Law Enforcement, Policing, Public Private Partnerships, School Resource Officer
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home