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HomeMy WebLinkAbout29- City Administrator CITY OF SAN BERN#4RDINO - REQUEST I=vR COUNCIL ACTION From: Fred Wilson Subject: Police Department Management Audit Assistant City Administrator Dept: Date: April 26 , 1995 Synopsis of Previous Council action: 9/19/94 -- Resolution #94-287 authorized performance of Police Department Management Audit. Recommended motion: 1. That the Police Management Audit Report conducted by Ralph Andersen and Associates be received and filed. 2. That staff be directed to meet and confer with the appropriate bargaining units on the impact of the proposed staffing changes. 3. That the City Administrator and the Acting Chief of Police be directed to oversee the implementation of the audit recommendations. 4. That Ralph Andersen and Associates be authorized to conduct a supplemental analysis of the potential — consolidation of the Police and Fire Dispatch operations at a cost not to exceed $5,000. Crl�— Contact person: Fred Wi 1 ann Phone: 5122 Supporting data attached: 4Z e Ward: FUNDING REQUIREMENTS: Amount: Source: Acct. No. (Acct Description) - Finance: Council Notes: Agenda Item No. STAFF REPORT The City initiated a management audit of the police department in August 1994 at the request of the Mayor and Council in order to identify methods of improving delivery of law enforcement services, identify resource needs and identify potential opportunities to improve its allocation of law enforcement resources. A series of evaluation objectives were outlined to the consultant, Ralph Andersen and Associates, which included: 1. Identify areas for improvement in the efficiency and resource allocation practices of the Police Department. 2 . Evaluate and assess current policies, strategies and practices in relation to current and future demands for service. 3 . Evaluate current practices for the deployment of personnel. 4 . Determine the ideal balance of staffing and levels of service including the Dispatch operation. 5. Provide recommendations for improvement in the organization and operation of the department. 6. Develop a specific implementation plan based on the findings and recommendations of the audit and provide assistance in the implementation process. 7 . Evaluate the advantages of a vehicle locator system. The audit process conducted by Ralph Andersen and Associates included a large amount of data collection and analysis and the participation of a large number of employees in the department through either attending briefing sessions, completing an organizational climate survey form and being interviewed by the consultants. In January 1995, Ralph Andersen and Associates completed the interim draft report which was reviewed by the Police Department. The comments received from the Police Department were subsequently incorporated into the Final Report which was submitted to the Mayor and Common Council and Police Commission. OVERVIEW OF AUDIT RECOMMENDATIONS The audit report, while acknowledging that the Police Department has many strengths including the quality of its employees and their commitment to providing efficient police services to the community, also noted that the department faces challenges in adequately addressing the policing needs of the community. The audit recommendations which are provided in summary form in Attachment I identify opportunities for the department to make changes to its organizational structure, reallocate its resources, and improve internal administration and communication. It is important to note that one of the major issues which was to be addressed in the management audit was the Patrol Division staffing levels. The basic unit of measurement necessary to undertake this analysis is Calls-for-Service (CFS) . Statistical information on the demand for police service (CFS) is obtained from computer records in the Computer Aided Dispatching System (CAD) . Due to many programming changes on the CAD system over the years, the consultant was unable to obtain reliable data on calls for service that would allow them to make an analysis relative to the appropriate level of staffing in patrol. The department has recognized this problem and is currently working with the MIS department to resolve these issues. The department has purchased the Police Response Optimization System (PROS) to generate patrol workload data from which to conduct staffing and deployment analyses. Based on the reliable data extracted from the PROS system, the consultant will provide additional findings relative to appropriate staffing levels in patrol services. The summary of the audit recommendations which are contained in Attachment I have been organized under the following categories: • Organization • Staffing • Communications • Technology • Strategies • Internal Administration It is recognized that a number of the recommendations in the organization and staffing categories will involve a meet and confer process with the appropriate bargaining units. Some of these staffing changes include a recommendation to delete the Assistant Chief of Police position, a recommendation that the Services Division should be headed by a civilian Manager position rather than a Captain position, civilianizing the existing Sergeant position heading the Property and Evidence Section and consideration of reassigning the Administrative Sergeants in the Patrol and Services Divisions to the Patrol or Investigative Divisions. With the exception of the consolidated Police/Fire Dispatch, the majority of the other recommendations focus on operational, administrative and organizational changes which can be implemented by the Chief of Police in conjunction with the City Administrator. Provided in Attachment II are the Police Department's comments on the audit. Although the consultant was not asked to directly evaluate the consolidation of communications between the Police Department and 2 the Fire Department, based on their observations, it was felt that a significant opportunity for cost savings and operational efficiencies existed through consideration of such a consolidation. Preliminarily, it was their observation that certain positions could be eliminated through a consolidation which could potentially result in salary and benefit savings. Because consideration of such a consolidation involves a number of issues including employee training, organizational and management issues, workload and staffing issues, facility needs and classification issues, it was felt that a supplemental analysis would be beneficial. Ralph Andersen and Associates has indicated that they could conduct this analysis for a not-to-exceed figure of $5, 000. An implementation plan has also been provided as part of this audit which outlines responsibilities and timing issues. It is our intention to utilize this plan as the schedule for audit implementation. A copy of the Police Management Audit is on file in the City Clerk's Office. 3 ra S ATTACHMENT I EXECUTIVE SUMMARY SAN BERNARDINO POLICE DEPARTMENT MANAGEMENT AUDIT This executive summary provides an overview of the Final Report on the Management Audit of the San Bernardino Police Department. The executive summary is brief and is focused upon the major findings and recommendations of the audit results. The final report document is more comprehensive and contains more detailed information which should be consulted for more specific information about the highlights presented here. The organization and format of the executive summary mirrors that of the final report document which includes separate chapters on: • Introduction; • Organization and Operations Profile; • Organization Climate Survey; • Survey of Other Agencies; • Issues and Directions; • Findings and Recommendations; • Implementation. The final report document also contains appendices illustrating the questionnaires and survey forms used in the management audit. An appendix to the report also shows the results of the organization climate survey. Background, Objectives and Scope The City of San Bernardino initiated a management audit of the Police Department in order to identify potential opportunities to improve its allocation of resources, to identify resource needs, and to identify methods of improving the delivery of law enforcement services. The audit was conducted with specific objectives. The audit objectives were to: S a c r a m e n t o D a I I a s N e w p o r t B e a c h 1446 Ethan Way, Suite 101 Sacram(3nto CA 958P5 (916)%�)-2075 San Bernardino Pok 7epartment Executive Summary Page ii • Identify areas for improvement in the efficiency and resource allocation practices of the Department; • Evaluate and assess current policies, strategies and practices in relation to current and future community demands for service; • Evaluate the advantages of a vehicle locator system; • Evaluate current practices for the deployment of personnel including special assignments, utilization of overtime and use of non-sworn personnel; • Determine the optimum balance of staffing and level of service including the dispatch operation; • Provide specific recommendations for improvements in the organization and operation of the Department; • Develop a specific implementation plan based on the findings and recommendations of the management audit and provide technical assistance in the implementation process. The audit process was comprehensive and included the major tasks of audit initiation, data collection, analysis, and the preparation of reports. A large number of employees of the Department participated in the management audit by attending a briefing session at the beginning of the audit, by completing an organization climate survey form, and/or by being interviewed by the consultants. Management Audit Context The management audit of the Police Department was not conducted in a vacuum. During the time the management audit was conducted the Police Department not only provided all of the assistance required by the consultants, it also continued to provide normal services. During this same time the Department was settling in to a temporary facility, was in the planning stages for the new police facility, and its employees were engaged in labor negotiations with the City. In addition, due to retirements and injuries, the Department had several key positions filled on a temporary basis with certified employees. Operationally, the Department had embarked upon the Operation Safe Streets (OSS) Program immediately prior to beginning the management audit. The OSS Program was staffed with employees from throughout the Department and, together with staff from the San Bernardino San Bernardino Pol' Department Executive Summary Page iii County Sheriffs Department and the California Highway Patrol, deployed them to address specific street crime problems. The point of this brief description of the organizational and operational context of the management audit is to acknowledge that it may have had an affect on the Department. To the extent possible the audit considered the organizational and operational context. Audit Results Management audits tend to focus upon the issues that need attention and improvement. This management audit of the San Bernardino Police Department is similar in that regard as the findings and recommendations address what the consultants believe are opportunities for improvement. The areas of the Police Department that do not need specific improvements and are functioning well and as intended are generally not reported. Because the focus of the management audit is on the identification of improvement opportunities does not mean the San Bernardino Police Department is not effective. The Department has many strengths including the quality of its employees and their commitment to providing efficient and effective police services to the community. It has other strengths including its long history of embracing the community policing concept and, more recently it implementation of the problem-oriented policing strategy. The Department is also highly flexible and has demonstrated its ability to address emerging priorities through tactics such as the implementation of the OSS Program. It is also reasonably well equipped and will soon have a modem new police facility from which to better serve the public. The Police Department faces a considerable challenge in adequately addressing the policing needs of the community. While it has generally done so in an effective manner it can improve by making significant changes to its organization structure, reallocating its resources, improving internal administration, and improving communications. The Department's policing strategy of problem-oriented policing in the context of community policing has been effective and provides the basis for further improvements. The specific improvement opportunities identified in this management audit are described below and,are described in more detail in Chapter VI of the report. San Bernardino Po; Department Executive Summary Page iv Recommendations Chapter VI of the Final Report on the Management Audit of the San Bernardino Police Department contains findings and recommendations described under the following categories: • Organization; • Staffing; • Communications; • Technology; I ■ Strategies; • Internal Administration. In summary, the recommendations of the management audit include the following: ORGANIZATION • The top level organization structure of the Department should be revised so that the Chief of Police directs the Department's three Divisions; • The Services Division should be headed by a civilian manager position rather than by a sworn captain position; • The Department should create a planning and research section with a direct reporting relationship to the Chief of Police; • Provide one or more lieutenants with training in strategic planning such as that provided at the POST Command College; • The Department should form a professional standards and inspections section; • The position currently assigned to public information activities should be reassigned to the Patrol Division; • New employee background checks should be contracted and should be coordinated by the Professional Standards and Research Section; • A Professional Standards and Research Section should be created by incorporating existing resources from Internal Affairs, Personnel and Training, and the Services Division; San Bernardino Po Department Executive Summary Page v • Strengthen the problem-oriented policing strategy by transferring all community programs(DARE,Mall Services,and crime prevention)to the area commands; • The supervision of the front counter staff should be transferred from the Patrol Division (watch commanders) to the Services Division (Records Manager); • With the move to the new police facility in August 1995, reduce the hours of operation for the front counter; • The Department should fill all currently vacant supervisory and management positions on a permanent basis as soon as possible; • The new Professional Standards and Research Section should be given responsibility for succession planning in the Department; • In the future, the Department should consider physically moving the District/POP Crimes Detail(Investigative Division)to the are commands; • The Department should develop an internal system to better document and communicate the allocation of resources; • The roles of the area commanders and watch commanders should be clearly articulated, documented and communicated throughout the Department; • Internal communications in the Department need to be improved and the Chief of Police should play a major role in making the improvements; • The Department should use the results of the management audit to improve organizational effectiveness; • The Department's recently completed draft training guidelines should be expanded to include the relationship of goals and objectives to employee development; • The Department should adopt a training master plan with specific goals and objectives and report on the goal and objective achievement; • The qty should consider combining police and fire communications dispatch services to realize significant savings. San Bernardino Poll.- Jepartment Executive Summary Page vi ■ The functional reporting relationship of the Chief of Police to the City Administrator should be reinforced to provide consistency with other operating departments. STAFFING • The recommended Professional Standards and Research Section should be given responsibility for the maintenance and use of the PROS system to conduct patrol workload and deployment analysis; ■ The position heading the Property and Evidence Section (Investigative Division) should be converted from a sworn (sergeant) to a civilian position; • Currently vacant positions in the Dispatch Center should be filled and Dispatch Supervisor positions should be assigned to a dispatch console position; • Division managers should carefully review current work schedules for all units not currently working around-the-clock schedules; • After full implementation of the PROS system the Department should use calls for service date to determine the impacts of various shift alternatives on operations; • After the completion and settling in at the new police facility the administrative sergeants (two)in the Patrol and Services Divisions should be reassigned to line activities in the Patrol or Investigative Divisions. COMMUNICATIONS • The Chief of Police should take the lead in the improvement of communications in the Department; • The Department needs to provide a uniform reporting and evaluation system on the effectiveness of special programs and strategies,particularly POP, and transmit those evaluations to Department staff. San Bernardino PoL Department Executive Summary Page vii TECHNOLOGY • The Department should develop and adopt a technology master plan that guides the acquisition of computer systems and applications and the associated training of staff; • The acquisition of a vehicle locator system should be considered as a part of the technology master planning process. STRATEGIES ■ The Department's policing strategy has been effective and it should seek additional opportunities for the implementation of the problem-oriented policing strategy; ■ Because special operations (such as OSS) require a high level of coordination and communications, the Department should improve its internal communications regarding the objectives and activities of future special operations; ■ The Department should form a temporary (available for deployment as needed) special enforcement unit from existing resources (MET,Vice and Narcotics, POP Teams). INTERNAL OPERATIONS • The Department should adopt a uniform goal and objective setting process that results in a comprehensive and useable document disseminated to the Department staff, City management staff, the Mayor and City Council; • Current work on a policy regarding special assignments should be completed so that a clear policy relating to special assignments exists and that provides maximum opportunities for qualified individuals and enhances morale and employee development; • The Department should make the timely completion of employee performance evaluations a performance objective for all supervisors and managers; San Bernarriino Police Department Executive Summary Page viii • Additional reviews for employees in highly sensitive assignments such as vice and narcotics investigations and intelligence should be implemented; • A physical fitness and w-111ness program based upon the POST Basic Academy Physical ConwLioning Manual should be adopted by the Department. More detailed information regarding the findings and the recommendations from the management audit are contained in Chapter VI of the Final Report. Implementation Chapter VII of the Final E, port document contains a plan for the implementation of the recommendations resulting from the management audit. The plan of implementation lists each of the recommendations and suggests both timing and action responsibility. The implementation plan should be used by the Department to guide its actions regarding the recommendations made in the report. The Mayor should receive periodic reports based upon the implementation plan from the Police Department to monitor progress. A management audit cannot be completed without the cooperation and assistance of a large number of individuals. The consultants received the full cooperation and assistance from Police Department employees at all levels in the organization. We particularly appreciate the cooperation of Chief of Police Dan Robbins and his command staff of Assistant Chief of Police Wayne Harp, Captain Bob Curtis, Captain Wes Farmer, and Captain Larry Richards. Ralph Andersen & Associates Sacramento, California March 17, 1995 City of San Bernardino San Bernardino Police Department Interoffice Memorandum ATTACHMENT II J To: Mayor Tom Minor From: a Wayne ne HP, Assistant Chief of Police Subject: Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Date: March 29, 1995 Copies: Fred Wilson, Assistant City Administrator Management and supervisory level personnel of the police department's three divisions have reviewed the final report management audit of the San Bernardino Police Department as conducted by Ralph Anderson & Associates. Each division has provided the Chief's Office with written comments reference those portions of the audit specific to their division. This document will represent a synthesis of those comments and my personal recommendations. For purposes of organizing this document, I will respond to each of the recommendations beginning on Page IV of Ralph Anderson's Executive Summary. ORGANIZATION The top le ,el organization structure of the Department should be revised so that the Chief of Police directs the Department's three divisions. The Department recommends the organization option described as Option A on Page 77 of the management audit. This recommendation would "assign direct management responsibility to the Assistant Chief or one of the three Divisions": I feel that this is an appropriate assignment for an Assistant Chief of Police when considering the extraordinary complexity of the Department's Patrol Division. This division alone has a budget in excess of $11,750,000, thus representing a division with a total budget larger than most of the City's departments. Furthermore, when the recommendations of this audit are complete, additional responsibilities, for example Mall Security,DARE, and crime prevention, will also be transferred to this division. By placing the Assistant Chief in this position organizationally,the concern of the audit team that "a direct reporting relationship between the Chief and the three divisions exists" will be met. Moreover, a chain of succession will be officially established when the Chief is absent from the Department due to vacations or other reasons. THE SBPD IS COMMITTED TO PROVIDING: PROGRESSIVE QUALITY POLICE SERVICE; A SAFE ENVIRONMENT TO IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF LIFE; A REDUCTION IN CRIME THROUGH PROBLEM RECOGNITION AND PROBLEM SOLVING Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -2- ! The Services Division should be headed by a civilian manager position rather than a sworn captain position: I have some concerns about this recommendation. While I certainly do not quarrel with Ralph Anderson's recommendations that this is doable, I am fearful that several issues were not fully explored. The current recommendation would remove all sworn personnel from the Services Division. It is required that all lateral and pre-service applicants for police officer positions be interviewed as part of the employment process. This has always been done by either the lieutenant or the captain in the Services Division as part of their role in the Department's personnel process. When all sworn personnel are removed from this division, it becomes unclear as to who will conduct these interviews. As approximately 300 such interviews are conducted annually, it would be inappropriate for this role to be handled exclusively by the Chief of Police particularly in light of the additional responsibilities shifted to that position by other audit recommendations. Leaving a sworn captain in the position would provide a person to fulfill this role. Also, having this division headed by a civilian manager would tend to diminish its importance to the rest of the Department. I believe this would serve as a detriment to the Services Division and possibly adversely impact interdivisional communications. I also note that City Charter Section 186 may impact this recommendation. Specifically, Charter Section 186 states that captains and the superintendent of records and identification will be a P-5. It has always been the policy of the police department that the Services captain is the P-5 articulated in the City Charter. I feel that a more appropriate course of action would be one consistent with the recommendation made by Ralph Anderson & Associates in their March 2nd final draft of the police audit. In this document they state, "This report does not recommend an immediate conversion of the captain position in Services Division to a civilian manager. Because of the changes in top management that have occurred over the past year, it is important that the Department have stability in the future. The conversion of this position should be studied by the Department in from two to three years. By that time the Department will have implemented the recommendations in this report and settled into its new facility and had an opportunity to operate with a new organization structure." Another concern of mine is a reduction in department sworn command staff from five to three will very seriously impair the department's emergency response capabilities. The department's current emergency response plan requires the Chief to serve on the City's policy group, a captain to function in the EOC, a captain to function as an incident commander, and a captain to remain at the department to Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -3- run the organization. Obviously, this deployment requires at least four sworn command staff members. This can not be accomplished if the Ralph Anderson recommendations are implemented. Furthermore, for approximately five months a year, one of those three command staff members will be on vacation, so only two will be available for emergency responses. This will have a similarly adverse impact on the department's duty chief program. That program requires a member of the command staff to serve as the "duty chief" one weekend out of every four to five. Under this recommended structure, the duty chief will be assigned weekends every two to three weeks. Quite frankly this is an unfair burden to place on the command staff. One final note, it appears that the management audit team is unaware of the fact that, when the Department moves into its new facility, the Services Division will also be in charge of a jail. I believe it will be very difficult to find a person with all the qualities they mention in the recommendation for this change and a person with experience running a jail. The Department should create a Planning and Research Section with a direct reporting relationship to the Chief of Police: I believe this is an appropriate recommendation. In fact,this recommendation was made at my insistence. I am concerned, however,that the resources transferred to this function are not adequate. In the recommended Table of Organization in Exhibit VI-C, this unit is described. It appears that this unit is comprised of the lieutenant transferred from Personnel and Training along with several other currently existing units. All of these units bring with them a full range of duties. The only additions to the unit are the aforementioned lieutenant. It appears then that this lieutenant will have supervision over Professional Standards and Inspections and the Planning and Research Units. This supervision alone will consume a great deal of the lieutenant's time. As the current supervisor of the Internal Affairs Unit, I can attest to the fact that Internal Affairs supervision and review of their work products is extremely time consuming. This task will be reassigned to the aforementioned lieutenant. I am concerned that the lieutenant in question will not have adequate time to fulfill the mission of this unit. I am also concerned about positioning of the Typist Clerk III in the Professional Standards/Inspections area. This TC III is apparently transferred from Personnel and Training. This TC III has a wide range of responsibilities in the Department's Personnel Unit. The absence of this TC III from Personnel will create a void which must be back filled. The audit does not appear to address who organizationally will accomplish these tasks. It is also not clear to me what the role of this TC III in the Professional Standards/Inspections Unit will be. Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -4- Provide one or more lieutenants with training in strategic planning such as that provided at the POST Command College: The Department agrees with this recommendation. The Department should form a Professional Standards and Inspection Section: The Department agrees, with the aforementioned reservations. The position currently assigned to public information activities should be reassigned to the Patrol Division: On Page 94 in the recommendation discussing this issue, it states that this position should be reassigned to a currently vacant position in Patrol enabling a net reduction in positions. The tasks currently handled by the public information officer would then be assigned to the Department's top managers and to the Professional Standards and Research Section. It has been my experience that many times the media's interest in police operations is highest when the Department's managers are required to be involved in hands on Department management. Thus they are not available to interact with the media. Additionally, the public information officer has a very large role in communicating the mission and accomplishments of the Department to the public we serve. This role would go unaddressed. Finally, assigning PIO responsibilities to the Professional Standards and Research Section will only diminish the ability of this unit to accomplish its prime mission. (Note my earlier concerns about the inadequacy of proposed staffing for this area.) I am very concerned that the removal of this position will adversely impact the Department's ability to communicate with the public we serve. I would suggest that consideration be given to the Table of Organization as described in the draft audit on Page 95. The draft audit placed the public information officer under the lieutenant in Standards and Inspections. New employee background checks should be contracted and should be coordinated by the Professional Standards and Research Section: In the findings of this Section on Page 94 of the audit it states, "This staff is assisted by the detectives assigned to the Internal Affairs Section." By this is meant that Internal Affairs has a role in background checks. This is not correct. The Internal Affairs Unit has never been involved in background checks of people applying for positions with the San Bernardino Police Department. However, the Department supports having background checks contracted out. The Department has considered doing so in the past, but has been prevented from moving forward Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -5- because of budget constraints. The Department has checked with companies who do police backgrounds. The average costs, based on our inquiries, are $900 for sworn personnel and $675 for non-sworn personnel (Note: These are only rough estimates given over the phone.) Based on our 1994 personnel activity, we would need to do backgrounds on approximately 69 sworn personnel and 25 non-sworn for a total cost of $95,575. However, POST is recommending that police departments do their backgrounds at the beginning of applicant processing rather than at the end as is our current practice. This POST recommendation is based on their interpretation of Americans With Disabilities Act requirements. If the Department is required to comply with the POST recommendations, our costs will go up to $379,166 per year for contract backgrounds. A Professional Standards and Research Section should be created by incorporating existing resources from Internal Affairs, Personnel and Training, and the Services Division: Again, the Department supports this recommendation consistent with my earlier comments. Strengthen the problem-oriented policing strategy by transferring the community programs (DARE, Mall Services, and crime prevention) to the area commands: The police department once had a component of community programs situated within the area commands. This consisted primarily of community service representatives who were trained in the presentation of the neighborhood watch programs. They also did a small amount of business and residential inspections and a few other smaller programs. A decision was made to centralize these functions to insure consistency in presenting programs and better support the neighborhood watch association. It is certainly possible to return back to this configuration and see if it can be made to work. With reference to DARE, it is my belief that this unit must remain intact; i.e., all of the four DARE officers reporting to the same supervisor. Thus, if they are to be assigned to Patrol, the unit will need to be assigned intact to one area commander. This is certainly feasible but will not be consistent with the area command philosophy. Included in community programs are alarm permits, citizen patrol, volunteer coordination and other similar programs. My staff and I have some concerns about the appropriateness of transferring these functions to the area command. Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -6- The supervision of the front counter staff should be transferred from the Patrol Division (watch commanders) to the Services Division (records manager): The Department can do this and, in fact, has considered doing it. I do have some concerns about insufficient supervision for evaluation purposes specifically the fact that these employee's immediate supervisors will not functionally supervise them With the move to the new police facility in August 1995, reduce the hours of operation at the front counter: The Department believes this is a good recommendation with the one caveat that it will result in a service reduction level to the public. The Department should fill all currently vacant supervisory and management positions on a permanent basis as soon as possible: The Department agrees. The new Professional Standards and Research Section should be given responsibility for succession planning in the Department: The Department agrees with this recommendation, as long as it can be done consistent with the City's Civil Service rules. In the future, the Department should consider physically moving the district/POP crimes detail (Investigative Division) to the area commands: This has been tried in the past and, probably due to the technological shortcoming described in the audit, has failed. Nevertheless, when technology comes on line to make this recommendation workable, the Department will certainly support it. The Department should develop an internal system to better document and communicate the allocation of resources: The Department supports this recommendation. The roles of the area commanders and watch commanders should be clearly articulated, documented and communicated throughout the Department: The Department agrees with this recommendation and is already taking steps to comply with it. Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -7- Internal communications in the Department need to be improved and the Chief of Police should play a major role in making the improvements: The Department agrees. The Department should use the results of the management audit to improve organizational effectiveness: The Department agrees. The Department's recently completed draft training guidelines should be expanded to include the relationship of goals and objectives to employee development: The Department agrees. The Department should adopt a training master plan with specific goals and objectives and report on the goals and objective achievement: The department agrees. The City should consider combining police and fire communications dispatch services to realize significant savings: The police department does not entirely control the implementation of this recommendation. The police department does believe that it is worth exploring and is currently working with the fire department towards that end. The functional reporting relationship of the Chief of Police to the City Administrator should be reinforced to provide consistency with other operating departments: 1 agree. STAFFING The recommended Professional Standards and Research Section should be given responsibility for the maintenance and use of the PROS system to conduct patrol workload and deployment analysis: I agree. Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -8- The position heading the Property and Evidence Section (Investigative Division) should be converted from a sworn (sergeant) to a civilian position: The department has already incorporated this recommendation in their 5-year Plan. Currently vacant positions in the Dispatch Center should be filled and Dispatch Supervisory positions should be assigned to a dispatch console position: I agree. Division managers should carefully review current work schedules for all units not currently working around-the-clock schedules: I agree. After full implementation of the PROS system, the Department should use calls for service data to determine the impacts of various shift alternatives on operations: I agree. After the completion and settling in at the new police facility, the administrative sergeants (two) in the Patrol and Services Divisions should be reassigned to line activities in the Patrol or Investigative Divisions. On Page 114 in the recommendation associated with this item, it states that these reassignments will enable a net reduction of two sergeant positions. I believe there is some misunderstanding on the part of the audit team as to the genesis and role of these two positions. In their findings it states that "The administrative sergeant in Patrol Division had major responsibility for the move to the interim facility and will have a similar role in the move to the new facility." This is not exactly accurate. The administrative sergeant in the Patrol Division has effectively no role in the construction of the new facility. The Patrol administrative sergeant had a very limited role in the move to our current interim facility. This role was for a period of approximately two to three weeks while the department was in the process of moving in and refurbishing the facility. Thus, I am concerned that there is some misunderstanding as to what the Patrol Division administrative sergeant does. The actual assignments to this position are as follows: managing the Reserve Officer Program, managing the Reserve Officer Training Program, managing the H-9 Program including budget and records, managing the Chaplain Program, Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -9- Disaster Preparedness and training to include training in the Standardized Emergency Management System and the Incident Command System, managing and following up on those employees on injury on-duty status including liaison work with Risk Management and medical treatment centers ('Phis liaison role with Risk Management is designed primarily to expedite the return of injured employees to light or full duty status. Our increased efficiency in following up on these employees probably exceeds the entire salary and fringe benefit load paid to the Patrol administrative sergeant), conducting and managing the Department's volunteer Honor Guard, conducting divisional inspections and audits, producing status reports, monthly reports and inventories. As I noted earlier in this report, the Patrol Division is far and away the Department's largest division; larger then most City departments. I have discovered that the Riverside Police Department, which has a Patrol Division of approximately 10% larger than ours, is run by two Captains. I believe this recommendation needs to be reconsidered. This position, as the Mayor knows, is a long standing one in the department and one which I feel the workload thoroughly justifies. There also appears to be some misunderstanding as to the role of the sergeant assigned to the Services Division. In the audit it states that "One sergeant assigned to the Services Division is currently working full time on the new facility." That is correct. However, this position is not an administrative sergeant to the Services Division. No such position has ever been permanently incorporated into the Department's Table of Organization. Rather, this is a position which was temporarily transferred from Patrol to Services for the aforementioned purpose of working on the construction of the new police facility. It was always the Department's intention to return this position to Patrol when the facility is completed and the department has occupied it. If this recommendation is complied with, it will simply result in reducing the number of sergeants assigned to the Patrol Division by one. A recommendation that I understand if it is made solely for cost saving purposes. COMMUNICATIONS The Chief of Police should take the lead in the improvement of communications in the Department: I agree. Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -10- The Department needs to provide a uniform reporting and evaluation system on the effectiveness of special programs and strategies, particularly POP, and transmit those evaluations to Department staff: I agree. TECHNOLOGY The Department should develop and adopt a technology master plan that guides the acquisition of computer systems and applications and the associated training of staff: I agree. The acquisition of a vehicle locator system should be considered as a part of the technology master planning process: I agree. STRATEGIES The Department's policing strategy has been effective and it should seek additional opportunities for the implementation of the problem-oriented policing strategy: The Department agrees. Because special operations (such as OSS) require a high level of coordination and communications, the Department should improve its internal communications regarding the objectives and activities of future special operations: The Department agrees. The Department should form a temporary (available for deployment as needed) special enforcement unit from existing resources (MET, Vice and Narcotics, POP Teams): The Department agrees conceptually with this recommendation. However, it is noted that some of the manpower numbers are inaccurate. The Department would also suggest that Traffic and the Volunteer Honor Guard be included in this special enforcement unit. Police Department Response to Ralph Anderson & Associates Management Audit Page -11- INTERNAL OPERATIONS The Department should adopt a uniform goals and objective setting process that results in a comprehensive and useable document disseminated to the Department staff, City management staff, the Mayor and City Council: The Department agrees and such a document has been in progress for several months. Current work on a policy regarding special assignments should be completed so that a clear policy relating to special assignments exist and that provides maximum opportunities for qualified individuals and enhances morale and employee development: Such a document has been completed and is presently awaiting Meet and Confer with affected employee organizations. The Department should make the timely completion of employee performance evaluations a performance objective for all supervisors and managers: I agree and this has been done. Additional reviews for employees in highly sensitive assignments such as vice and narcotics investigations and intelligence should be implemented: This is a good recommendation. We have been working towards drug testing for narcotics officers. However, it has been suggested by City personnel that we wait until they complete the Meet and Confer process with the City drug testing policy. We are currently researching our ability to require a financial interest statement. A physical fitness and wellness program based upon the POST Basic Academy Physical Conditioning Manual should be adopted by the Department. This recommendation is already in progress and well on its way towards completion. WH/Pg