Ties to the community
Deepa Bharath
For Police Chief John Hensley, change needs to be visible.
One of the first changes he made after taking charge in June was
to get all detectives to wear business attire, complete with ties --
previously unheard of in the department.
It was a widely unpopular decision, Hensley admitted with a smile.
“But it had to be done,” he said. “It’s no different than officers
wearing uniforms. I know it hasn’t been a popular decision. But I’m
not going to apologize for putting them in ties.”
It has to do with the community looking at its police department
as a professional organization, Hensley said.
“People look at everything, right down to our police cars,” he
said. “Are they waxed? What’s the condition of the tires and the
paint? When they see a sharp-looking police car parked in a corner,
it has its visual impact. And it sends a positive message.”
Hensley also refuses to accept visual blight in local
neighborhoods.
“When I started here, people said I couldn’t do anything about
some of the issues, like the shopping carts, the homeless people and
the day laborers,” he said. “But I don’t think that’s true.”
Hensley believes that such “quality-of-life issues” and many more
problems that plague the community can be solved with efficient
community policing.
“It’s about not waiting for people to complain about problems in
their neighborhoods,” he said. “It’s about being proactive and
attacking issues before they become problems.”
The chief has started implementing several changes within the
department to achieve that end, he said. To start with, he has taken
community policing from the hands of a few officers and made it a
department-wide concept.
“Earlier, we had a few problem-oriented policing officers doing
what the entire department needed to do,” Hensley said.
Now, those officers will serve as mentors to the rest of the
department. Each officer now works a beat so they can become familiar
with the area and the members of that community can become familiar
with them. Since Nov. 1, two foot-beat officers have been assigned to
the Westside.
These officers, however, will not remain permanently in the
Westside but will be rotated to other areas, Hensley said.
“The Westside is traditionally associated with problems,” he said.
“But other parts of the city need attention, too.”
Each beat officer has also been asked to “adopt a school” in his
or her area, Hensley said. This, he said, is in addition to the
school resource officers in the city’s high schools and middle
schools.
“What happens is, we have no one in the elementary schools, and we
need to be hooked in there as well,” he said.
The arrangements with the schools have already started to pay off,
the chief said. He said one was was able to help a school principal
who had problems with soccer players’ urinating on and otherwise
damaging freshly sodded areas during the weekends.
“One of our officers was able to pool in some resources, inform
the players not to go into the sodded areas and also get a portable
restroom there,” Hensley said. “It’s that kind of problem-solving
skills that we’re hoping to develop in our officers.”
What Hensley is proposing is community policing on a much larger
scale, said Capt. Tom Warnack, who oversees the department’s Field
Operations Division.
“As a patrol commander, I see it as a real benefit to the
community and the city as a whole,” he said.
The key to problem solving for officers is to open up a dialogue
with the community, Warnack said.
“When officers assigned to geographic beats get to know the
residents, it becomes a collaborative effort,” he said.
The department is trying to build relationships not only with the
community, but with other city departments, such as code enforcement,
the fire department and the planning department, Warnack said.
“We’re using these relationships to address issues that are not
traditional challenges to law enforcement, but more quality-of-life
issues,” he said.
Fire Chief Jim Ellis said Hensley is continuing where former
police chief Dave Snowden left off as far as working with other city
departments.
“John is taking community policing to a new level,” Ellis said.
“And we’re going to help the Police Department by keeping our eyes
open in the community and working with them to make sure we keep
crime down in our city.”
Warnack says he has begun to “see some real changes.”
Piles of mattresses and rubbish are beginning to disappear from
alleyways, he said.
“We had shopping carts littered throughout the community,” Warnack
said. “Now, we have that under control. It’s nice to drive around and
not have to see visual blight in the community.”
The officers’ beats will also likely be redesigned, Hensley said.
“Some of them do seem to be out of alignment, and we’re studying
that right now,” he said. “We’re basing that on calls for service.
What we’re trying to do is to avoid overloading one officer when
another has nothing much to do. That would improve response time.”
Hensley is also working on other projects such as sprucing up the
department’s Web site, which he believes “is woefully inadequate.”
“It needs to have a lot more information such as crime statistics,
our ongoing projects, updated wanted posters and pictures of our key
staff members,” he said.
The chief is also having complaints from residents directly sent
to him, he said.
Hensley doesn’t believe Costa Mesa can get “too big for community
policing.” Some of the models for this kind of policing in Southern
California are big cities such as San Diego and Santa Ana, he said.
“It works well for Costa Mesa because we’re a big and growing
city,” he said. “But we still have that hometown feel. I don’t want
to run a big police department that’s faceless.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at deepa.bharath@latimes.com.
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