Wendy Wulff:

I agree with you in many areas. I don't think 
the police get paid enough.  I can't say for 
certain if that causes us to get inferior
candidates, but it does reflect the wrong set of
priorities.  

Is the city line budget publicly published 
anywhere? I wonder what city employees make more
than that. And how important is THEIR job
relative to police work?

Anyway, where I probably part company with you 
is on the question of what motivations make a
good
cop. The reason some of us support residency is
simply that non-resident cops don't have any
personal stake in the quality of our
neighborhoods.  They are people who either 
never lived here or moved out. Either choice
reflects a sort of rejection of city life. And I
think that can have some impact when they do the
work.  It may be built on a subtle contempt for
the kind of people who live in core cities.  And
that leads to inevitable friction with the
residents, especially in areas with heavy
minority
concentration.  How is an Apple Valley resident
supposed to have rapport with a Jordan
neighborhood resident?

So, I support a significant increase in police
salary. But I reserve judgment on whether a
nonresident can remain truly "professional" 
when colliding with an alien culture such as the
one in this city.


 


=====
Jim Mork
Longfellow Neighborhood

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