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File #: 24-1333    Version: 1 Name: 8/29/24 Resolution to Eliminate Two (2) Police Office Positions and Add One (1) Lieutenant Position
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 8/19/2024 In control: City Council
On agenda: 8/19/2024 Final action: 8/19/2024
Enactment date: 8/19/2024 Enactment #: R-24-339
Title: Resolution to Eliminate Two (2) Police Office Positions and Add One (1) Lieutenant Position
Title
Resolution to Eliminate Two (2) Police Office Positions and Add One (1) Lieutenant Position
Memorandum
This resolution seeks to eliminate two (2) Police Officer positions from the FY 2025 Police Department budget and create one (1) Lieutenant position in the FY 2025 Police Department budget. This change will reduce the number of positions in the Ann Arbor Police Officers Association union by two and will increase the number of positions in the Command Officers Association of Michigan union by one.

This change is necessary for continuity of police operations on the weekends. Currently there are not enough command officers to staff police operations on the weekend which is causing an operational challenge.

Police departments nationwide, including those in Michigan, are currently grappling with a pressing issue - the struggle to attract and hire police officers to respond to priority and even routine calls for service. Over the past five years, the Ann Arbor Police Department has been dealing with a sworn police officer/attrition vacancy rate that amounted to 63 officers or an average of 12 officers a year. Currently there are 12 unfilled police officer vacancies. A newly developed recruitment plan is underway, and the department is expected to fill these sworn police vacancies within the next 24 months. As we staff these positions, the police department will be better positioned to plan and determine the optimal future needs.

The advent of hiring new police officers is a fundamental supervisorial challenge for police executives. A central leadership role at the lieutenant's rank is infusing a culture of accountability. This also entails leading first-line supervisors and officers to respond to emergencies in progress, employing the proper tactics, appropriately responding to routine calls for service, fostering community policing, and being able to provide administrative and critical updates to city staff.

Lieutenants serve as shift commanders, and...

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