Retirement for Cops, Part 1: The Challenges

Usually at the 12- or 13-year mark of an officer’s 20-year career the countdown begins. The thrill of the job has faded. The officer has been burned on more than one occasion (suspension, losing a promotion, internal politicking, etc.). This is typically where the work slowdown begins. No longer enamored with chasing crooks down the block, jumping over fences, and so on, the mid-career law enforcement officer is now much [...]

June 28th, 2019|

Retired Corrections Officers Can Now Patrol NJ Schools

A new state law in New Jersey will let almost all retired law enforcement under age 65 become armed school police officers, including former correctional officers who spent their careers guarding prisons.Signed Monday by Gov. Phil Murphy, the law lets retired NJ Transit officers, Port Authority Police, Fish and Wildlife officers, and others become part-time school police officers under the direction of the local police chiefs. It comes amid a [...]

June 28th, 2019|

The Growing Gap in Pension Funding

Public pensions across America are largely underfunded. A 2016 study by The Pew Charitable Trusts found that cumulatively, state pension funds across the U.S. faced a $1.4 trillion deficit. That was a $295 billion increase from 2015, and the 15th annual increase in pension debt since 2000. This problem is growing, and it puts the retirement incomes of public servants at risk.

June 28th, 2019|

Understanding the LEOSA Qualification Process

We as law enforcement officers can do one thing very well: take something simple and complicate it. It isn't our fault, as we spent a career being careful in our investigations and arrests to make sure we crossed every "t" and dotted every "i."LEOSA is a really simple law. But we have managed to take that simple law and complicate it because we believe that it is the right thing [...]

June 28th, 2019|

Life after law enforcement

For a law enforcement officer, leaving active duty can be a difficult time. Whether or not the person freely chooses to leave, is forced to leave, medically retires, or just hits that “mark” of retirement, a strong camaraderie among fellow officers has been developed.At some point, officers must be prepared to become civilians. A loss of police power and a feeling that one is no longer part of the cop family [...]

June 28th, 2019|

Pensacola wants to put retired police officers back to work

Pensacola wants retired police officers to come back to work part time to put more full-time officers on the streets.The Pensacola City Council is set to vote Thursday on an ordinance that will allow retired police officers under the city's pension plan to come back and work on a part-time basis.Currently, city ordinance bars officers who are retired under the pension plan to work for the city part-time.Pensacola Police Chief [...]

June 28th, 2019|
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