This is big news. Now lets see if Baker and Beacon Hill will agree on a well funded process to make sure ALL cops, including the mostly all white State police adhere to some acceptable standards.
By Shira Schoenberg - CommonWealth
Reporter
Thursday, June 11
It has long been known
that Massachusetts is lacking in its standardization of police training –
but there was little urgency on Beacon Hill to do anything about it. Now,
the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis and the resulting national
outcry over police brutality may be the impetus needed to finally reform
the process.
Nowhere is the problem
laid out more clearly than in a November 2019 report by
state auditor Suzanne Bump.
The problem is not
standards. Massachusetts actually has some of the strictest standards in
the nation for police training, requiring all police officers to undergo 40
hours of in-service police training annually.
However, it is left up to
each municipal police department to enforce the training requirement, and
no one at a state level tracks whether police officers actually undergo the
training.
Of 138 municipal
departments that responded to Bump’s survey, 13 said they did not provide
officers with 40 hours of training and four did not provide any training.
The state has a Municipal
Police Training Committee, but as The Republican/MassLive.com
reported in a 2019 story on
Bump’s report, the agency is inadequate to fulfill police training needs.
There are few courses available, not enough instructors, and the facilities
lack even a firearms range or vehicle track. Some larger departments
conduct in-house training, while smaller departments cobble together
training regimens through neighboring police departments, outside
consultants, or online courses. Departments also need the money to pay
officers – and the officers who cover their shifts – to attend trainings.
One proposal to address
this inconsistency is a POST system, or Police Officer Standards and
Training. POST is a method used in 45 states where a central system sets
standards for police training, tracks each officer’s training, and can
decertify officers for misconduct.
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3 Comments:
Question is does Framingham do this training? If not, why not?
Framingham does Quinn funding, which is a big fat joke. Take the money for that and use it to train the cops in ethics and fairness and maybe things will get better.
I'm not sure what level of training is done here in the Ham and won't guess. If you remember, Baker signed a bill that took a small percentage of rental car fees to be used exclusivity for training.
The Quinn Bill money is for cops who advance their education that's related to police work. That money is tied into their hourly rate and never goes away.
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