By Walker Orenstein
Associated Press
OLYMPIA, Wash. — Faced with reports of an unhappy and underpaid Washington State Patrol, lawmakers are trying to give patrol officers a pay raise and make other departmental upgrades to reverse an increasing shortage of troopers.
Two bills in the Legislature, scheduled for hearings Monday in the Senate Transportation Committee, seek to halt what a survey of the state patrol calls an “unsustainable” drop in troopers because many officers are leaving for higher pay at other police departments or retiring. The bills would require patrol salaries to be competitive with other local law enforcement agencies.
Chief John Batiste is “well aware that we’re kind of at a critical juncture with the amount of troopers that are leaving, and something needs to be done,” said patrol spokesman Kyle Moore.
A 7.5 percent across-the-board raise is the main tenet of one proposed solution, Senate Bill 6547, sponsored by Republican Sen. Randi Becker of Eatonville. Becker’s bill would also make the state patrol to develop a marketing and outreach plan to recruit new troopers.
Another bill, Senate Bill 6331, would adjust trooper salaries to always be higher than half of the top-five salaries of local law enforcement agencies in Washington. Under the proposal, if a trooper leaves the state patrol within three years to become a local police officer, that local department would have to pay the state for the trooper’s training costs.
That bill is sponsored by Republican Sen. Don Benton of Vancouver, who said his measure is a permanent fix compared to Becker’s plan. When troopers are trained by the state and then leave for local police outfits, “it ends up costing the state and the state patrol account an awful lot of money to train troopers that we don’t get to use,” Benton said.
A bill in the House addressing the issue but not directly offering the patrol a pay raise, House Bill 2872, is scheduled for a hearing on Tuesday in the House Labor and Workplace Standards Committee.
Moore said the patrol doesn’t comment on proposed legislation.
The survey, created by a California-based financial consultant company, is expected to be presented to the Senate panel Monday. It recommends changes to the patrol such as salaries adjusted by location, bonuses to keep troopers of retirement age and modifying retirement plans for early-career troopers.
But money isn’t everything to officers, according to the survey. Fewer than 18 percent of troopers and sergeants surveyed in the patrol feel they’re valued, and 37 percent said they’re somewhat valued. Fewer than 10 percent responded that their opinion is taken into account by the department, and 32.6 percent feel their opinion is somewhat valued.
The report has five recommendations to fix job satisfaction issues, including allowing troopers to take part in selecting new, more comfortable uniforms. Moore said the patrol is taking steps to evaluate and improve communication between management and officers in the field, and the department plans to ask the Legislature to pay for new uniforms next year.
Fewer than 37 percent of troopers would encourage others to consider starting a career with the state patrol, according to the report.
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