Holding Pen
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COMMUNITY POLICING
The police department presented the following slide in the FY24 budget work session with the City Council. It defines, in a nutshell, the primary focus of Community Policing.
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The primary focus of “Community Policing” is creating partnerships, active problem solving, and an organizational structure that supports this philosophy.
To be a successful police agency, the department needs collaborative relationships with all aspects the public has to offer. Cops with Kids, National Night Out, meeting with seniors, and impromptu conversations, whenever and wherever possible, are just a few of the many events and efforts officers are a part of in the community.
Meeting with other city departments, resident groups, and downtown businesses expand those important relationships to augment problem solving within the city. These relationships help prevent crime, solve crime, and help the department keep the public safe.
Partnering with numerous agencies on the local, state, and federal levels is what the department considers “force multipliers” and completes the loop of what Community Policing in Portsmouth is all about.
It takes many to successfully police the city, and the department needs a facility that fosters those attributes.
COMMUNITY-CENTERED POLICE FACILITY
A law enforcement facility is another tool an officer uses. It is not an office building.
International Association of Chief of Police (IACP) published an article about the psychology of a police facility. The old school facility gave the impression of a “fortress”. That is not optimal if a positive community relationship with police is the goal. Police facilities are now designed to focus on making the facility work with and for the community and stakeholders, while still maintaining the security required of a law enforcement facility.
“… Given the times, when communities are calling for more openness, more transparency, and more inclusiveness from their police departments, can the profession afford to neglect the role of law enforcement buildings in how police are perceived? After all, when victims venture to report a crime to the police, they often do so within a police station. When offenders are taken for their initial bookings, they are taken to a police station. When police officers report to work, they typically do so in a police station. When reporters go to get quotes from department officials, when new recruits go to turn in their applications… a lot of law enforcement’s contact with the public and community stakeholders happens at a police station or similar public safety facility. Is it not valuable, then, to consider how to make that contact one where the individual walks away with a positive impression of law enforcement and not a negative one?”
Psychology of Space: Enhancing Legitimacy through Open, Transparent, and Inclusive Facilities for Police and the Public
– Police Chief Magazine
The goal for the police department is two-fold. To build a new police facility that meets the needs of the department and 21st Century policing and design the public face and public areas inside the building to be “community inclusive”.
The law enforcement expert currently on the design team with Lavallee Brensinger is architect Ian Reeves from ADG. He wrote an article detailing the topic of “Facility Design for Community Engagement”. In the article for Police Chief Magazine, he states “…Community engagement has become the central focus of policing…There are many ways to implement this philosophy, and facility design is one factor that can play a critical part in any law enforcement agency’s community engagement efforts….” Read the full article.
The facility the Department is currently occupying what was a former hospital in 1962. The Police Department has occupied the space, renovated in 1991 to fit police operations into the lower levels of the hospital, for 32 years. In a meeting recently, while discussing the space needs assessment, Mr. Reeves said a police facility is a 24/7/365 building. When a police department uses a facility for a year, it equates to three years of wear and tear use of a regular building.
Generations of staff have made the quirkiness and less-than-optimal space function at 3 Junkins Avenue. However, after 32 years and the significant changes in policing, equipment, IT, and even evidence submittal and processing, to name a few, we hope, through this public process, the City residents will agree there is a significant need for a new police facility.