ADVANCE FOR RELEASE AT 4:30 P.M. EDT BJS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1999 202/307-0784 PERSONNEL INCREASES IN LOCAL POLICE AND SHERIFFS' DEPARTMENTS WASHINGTON, D.C. Local police departments had an estimated 531,496 full-time employees as of June 1997, the Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) announced today. Of these employees about 420,000 were sworn personnel (officers with arrest powers). Local police employment was up by an average of about 3 percent per year since 1993, compared to about 1 percent annually from 1987 through 1993. Sheriffs' departments had an estimated 263,427 full-time employees, including about 175,000 sworn personnel. Total employment was up by an average 4.4 percent per year since 1993, compared to 3.1 percent annually from 1987 through 1993. The data are from BJS' Law Enforcement Management and Administrative Statistics (LEMAS) series, which collects and publishes information from law enforcement agencies every three to four years. The composition of police forces in the United States is changing, the LEMAS report noted. There are increasing numbers of minority and women officers and more departments requiring college. Members of racial and ethnic minority groups comprised 21.5 percent of full-time sworn local police officers, compared to 19.1 percent in 1993, 17.0 percent in 1990 and 14.6 percent in 1987. Minority group membership among sworn personnel in sheriffs' departments grew from 13.4 percent in 1987 to 19 percent in 1997. Fourteen percent of local police departments, employing 31 percent of all local police officers, required new recruits to have completed at least some college. One percent required a 4-year degree, as did 1 percent of sheriffs' departments. Fifty-six percent of local police officers worked for a department with a formal, written community policing policy, as did 33 percent of sheriffs' officers. Thirty-eight percent of both local police and sheriffs' departments had sworn personnel assigned full-time as school resource officers. Nationwide in 1997 there were about 9,400 police officers and 2,900 sheriffs' deputies in schools. Eighty-three percent of the police departments and 85 percent of the sheriffs' departments had written policies on the proper handling of domestic disputes. Ninety-three percent of both local police and sheriffs' departments had written policies on pursuit driving. Six percent of local police departments and five percent of sheriffs' departments discouraged all vehicle pursuits. In 1997, 85 percent of all local police departments, employing 97 percent of all officers, participated in 911 emergency telephone systems, compared to 84 percent of sheriffs' departments, employing 88 percent of all officers. Ninety-one percent of both police and sheriffs' departments, in each case employing 99 percent of all officers, had written policies on the use of deadly force. Almost all police and sheriffs' departments authorized the use of non-lethal weapons, such as pepper spray and batons, in appropriate circumstances. From 1993 through 1997 the percentage of local police officers employed by a department that authorized the use of pepper spray increased from 69 percent to 90 percent, and for sheriffs' deputies from 64 percent to 90 percent. Forty-three percent of police departments and 40 percent of sheriffs' departments required all patrol officers to wear body armor while on duty. Police departments operated about 215,000 automobiles and sheriffs' departments used about 100,000 cars. In each case about a third of these vehicles were unmarked. About two-thirds of sheriffs' deputies and three-fourths of local police officers worked for a department that used computers or terminals in the field, away from their office, up from 50 percent and 55 percent respectively in 1993. Starting salaries for local police officers averaged about $28,400, ranging from about $18,800 in the smallest jurisdictions to $30,600 in the largest. For sheriffs' deputies, starting salaries averaged about $26,000, ranging from $19,400 to $30,200. About two-thirds of all local police officers worked for departments that authorized collective bargaining, as did about half of sheriffs'deputies. During fiscal year 1997, local police department operating expenditures amounted to $67,100 per sworn officer, and sheriffs' departments spent $73,000 per sworn deputy. The two reports, "Sheriffs' Departments 1997" (NCJ-172428) and "Local Police Departments 1997" (NCJ-173429), were written by BJS statisticians Brian A. Reaves and Andrew L. Goldberg. Executive summaries of "Sheriffs' Departments 1997" (NCJ-179011) and "Local Police Departments 1997" (NCJ-178934) may be obtained from the BJS fax-on-demand system by dialing 301/519-5550, listening to the complete menu and selecting document numbers 171 or 172. Or call the BJS clearinghouse number: 1-800-732-3277. Fax orders for mail delivery to 410/792-4358. The BJS Internet site is: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/ Additional criminal justice materials can be obtained from the Office of Justice Programs homepage at: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov # # # BJS99192 After hours contact: Stu Smith at 301/983-9354