When focused on best practices to reduce harm, both physical and psychological, and keep community relations intact, training is the most effective and direct means of shaping officers who protect the public and preserve public safety.
Introduction
Training is the foundation by which police departments ensure that officers engage in safe, fair, and effective policing. This point is emphasized in the Final Report of the President’s Task Force on 21stCentury Policing (the President’s Task Force Report), which observes: “As our nation becomes more pluralistic and the scope of law enforcement’s responsibilities expands, the need for expanded and more effective [police] training has become critical.”[i]
To serve communities well, officers should stay up to date on best practices and continually develop their skills. Yet no universal standards for police training exist; each state and jurisdiction has different requirements. Departments that want to practice community policing, however, should emphasize the values of fairness, equity, procedural justice, legitimacy, transparency, and accountabilityin all trainings. These values, as well as training in tactics such as de-escalation and crisis response, will help develop officers with a guardian mindset oriented toward serving communities.
[i]The President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing, Final Report of the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing 3 (2015) [hereinafter the President’s Task Force Report], https://cops.usdoj.gov/pdf/taskforce/TaskForce_FinalReport.pdf.
Standard Training Practices
All police officers are required to successfully complete extensive academy and field training programs. Nationally, more than 600 law enforcement academies train new recruits at more than 18,000 law enforcement agencies.[i]Nearly half of these academies are housed at educational institutions, such as colleges, universities, and technical and vocational schools.[ii]
Many police departments send recruits to these academies, and some (in larger jurisdictions) operate their own academies. Both types are effective if they meet departmental needs and provide high-quality training. State and regional academies, however, are only able to provide baseline instruction, covering the minimum requirements of departments served. Unlike in-house academies, state and regional academies don’t tailor trainings to the departments where recruits will eventually work or to the communities that they will eventually serve.
After graduating, new officers continue training with a higher-ranking officer — often called a field training officer. FTOs provide intensive on-the-job training and daily performance evaluations; the goal is to teach new officers how to navigate the job, including how to interact with community members, adhere to department policies and procedures, and generally carry out the department’s mission.
New officers benefit when FTOs are selected based on their performance histories and mentorship abilities. Unfortunately, training doesn’t always give new officers the skills they need to succeed. Some must learn department-specific policies on their own, especially whenfield training focuses on writing reports and other administrative skills (which are important but do not significantly influence community policing).
After completing field training, officers must meet requirements for ongoing, in-service, and continuing professional education. All states have Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) commissions, which set minimum training requirements for officers and certify them as “peace officers.”
To maintain certification, most commissions require officers to complete at least some continuing education courses. These requirements vary widely by state and department. Some states, like Illinois, require training in procedural justice and cultural competency every three years, while others leave this type of training to individual departments.[iii]Similarly, some states require officers to regularly certify competency in nonlethal tools, like pepper spray, while others require regular certification only in lethal tools, like firearms.
[i]Brian A. Reaves, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, State and Local Law Enforcement Training Academies, 2013, 1 (2016), https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/slleta13.pdf.
[ii]Id. at 2.
[iii]Ill. Police Training Act, 50 Ill. Comp. Stat. 705/7 (2018), http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/ilcs3.asp?ActID=731&ChapterID=11.