April 26, 2023
By: Dwayne Page
More police officers
Smithville Police Chief Mark Collins is asking the Mayor and Aldermen to create two new police officer positions within the department.
Chief Collins addressed the city leaders Monday evening during a budget workshop meeting.
The city currently has 15 police department positions filled by 14 officers and an administrative assistant (records clerk). Chief Collins said the city is growing and there is a need for more officers and if the mayor and aldermen grant his request, the 2 additional officers would be assigned to night shifts. Currently there are only 2 nighttime officers and a nighttime sergeant.
“During the daytime I have 2 detectives, who do investigations, along with myself, Captain Steven Leffew, a daytime sergeant, and 2 daytime patrol officers so I don’t need any extra people on days. Nighttime is when I need them and both of these new employees would go straight to the night shift and if that is what we do (hire 2 more officers) only but 2 days a week, I would have 4 employees on all the time at nighttime which would allow us to do more,” said Chief Collins.
“We work 12-hour shifts with an “A” and “B” shift. I have a daytime sergeant and a nighttime sergeant. They work 8 hours, 5 days a week. The patrol officers work 12 hours. I have 2 on “A” shift days and 2 on “A” shift nights. I also have 2 on “B” shift days and 2 on “B” shift nights. When one crew is not working, the other one is working. They rotate where they are off every other weekend. I have 4 people actually assigned to the night shift plus the sergeant, but the 2-night shift groups never work together. When one group is working, the other is off. At night, I never have more than 3 officers working. I have the sergeant and the 2 shift officers,” he said.
In the 7 years he has been police chief, Collins said the city has grown and so has the number of calls and many of them have become more violent in nature.
“When I started (police chief) in 2015, the 911 dispatch center generated 5,143 calls to the Smithville Police Department. Last year in 2022, the 911 center generated 6,648 calls which doesn’t count traffic stops, extra patrols, or people who walk into the police department and want reports. That’s not a great increase in number over 7 years but Smithville is growing, and we (police officers) are busy all the time,” said Chief Collins.
“The nature of the calls we get are not just going to unlock a car door for someone. Nowadays, its more of a domestic here or a fight there and I don’t have enough people to go around (answering calls),” Chief Collins continued. “Two more officers, one on each shift at nighttime would really alleviate a lot of the stress on other officers and with more people there would be more production. We would be able to do more. Right now if we have 2 officers tied up on a domestic, the city has no one else to answer a call. I think 2 more employees would make the city and all the officers safer, and it would not burn them (officers already on staff) out by working them all the time. It would also save the city money because when I have to swap people around from shift to shift when someone is out, I have to pay time and a half to fill it. If I had extra people, I wouldn’t have to replace that person (someone out). I would still be a man short but I would still have enough officers to cover the city and do it efficiently,” he said.
Although the police department got a new police car this past year with another one coming soon after having been ordered almost a year ago, Chief Collins is asking that two more new police cars be funded in the new budget. The cost of the cars is expected to be $36,451 plus the city will have to include funds of up to $11,000 for each vehicle to equip them.
Chief Collins is also asking the city to set aside funds to eventually replace the police department’s 10-year-old tasers.
“We have replaced and fixed some of them but it cost about $475 to repair one, A new one is $995. The officers carry the tasers with them every day and we have had several of them (tasers) go down. None of them are down right now and I am not asking for money to replace them all I just want you to be aware of this and maybe put aside some money because if they do go down, I want to be able to order a new one and trash the old one. The tasers we have are really good and dependable but like everything else, they do wear out,” said Chief Collins.
The mayor and aldermen have not yet acted on the request.