A dear friend and mentor of mine, Chad Barr,
and I shared a conversation about what I saw as a major issue facing
Police Departments today. I have had the incredible opportunity to do
some leadership work for a major U.S. Police Department and have gained
tremendous respect for those that take on the challenge of keeping
citizens safe.
The media today is replete with stories of police failures in
minority communities, particularly African American communities. I am
not sure I have heard stories hitting the national news wires of
anything but Police Vs. The _________(fill in the blank of the local)
African American community.
The police coast to coast seem to be failing miserably at serving and
protecting the entire citizenry of their various jurisdictions, and
they are failing in plain site. The failures are magnified in poor
minority communities. They are failing, and they will continue to fail.
Why?
I am a firm believer in the work hard to keep it simple rule. I will
offer that police departments have a common thread problem. It is not a
lack of minority representation on the various police forces, although
it would go a long way to rectifying the perceptions far too many easily
draw too. Moreover, departments would benefit from the improved and
proven strength of organizations that incorporate diversity as part of
their fabric. Most notably the U.S. Armed Forces.
Police Departments across the country face continued failure for the
lack of having shared values what the Marines call Guiding Principles.
Shared values (Guiding Principles)
There are three major reasons to have shared values, it guides
behavior, and it provides a healthy unity, and it is an insurance
policy.
Police officers are community leaders. The communities they protect
rarely view them that way. Sadly, police officers rarely see themselves
as community leaders. Their behavior is not viewed as that of a leader.
Case in point, a young woman walking home holding a bag of groceries.
She is attractive. She is African American. A police officer stops her,
questions her, and treats her as if she were a criminal, already found
guilty.
The woman attempts to file a complaint. She is at the precinct to
make her complaint. She is told to wait. She waits and waits and waits.
Hours pass and when she can finally file her complaint. The Police
Sergeant taking her report finds fault with her. 'You must have done
something or you would not have been stopped!'
When queried about the situation the Police Sergeant's response was
"I have to look out for my officers. I'm their Sergeant." So, the
question begs to be answered, who is her Sergeant? Bad behavior,
supported by lack of corrective action is acceptable behavior.
Behavior
With shared values, ethics, guiding principles, bad behavior is
corrected immediately, appropriately regardless of who you are. Shared
values speak to the expected behavior in accomplishing your duties. Not
living up to those values must invoke action on the part of the
leadership. The accepted behavior is not to cover-up but to hold all
accountable. Leaders, as every Marine will tell you
regardless of rank, are responsible for everything they do or fail to
do, and are responsible for everything their Marines do or fail to do.
No sidestepping is allowed.
Unity
Shared Values also provide unity within organizations that become the
very fabric they wear. Marines are proud to tell you they are Marines.
The title United States Marine evokes in the mind of Americans a sense
of respect and awe. The title carries a certain mystique that is
recognized worldwide. The title of _____________(You name the city or
municipality) Police Department should evoke a sense of pride and
confidence in the citizenry, as well as in those that wear the blue
cloth.
Insurance Policy
Shared Values is also an insurance policy. When the values are shared
and demonstrated by leadership throughout the organization, the outlier
will surface immediately.
The Marines believe in the values of Honor, Courage and Commitment.
Those who fail are self-identifying. The idea of hiding among your
peers is practically impossible. Strong, ethical, shared values assist
in keeping the ranks strong and the reputation in tact.
What can be done?
Police Departments must develop their own Shared Values. They must be
compelling and speaks to the heart of all who dare to take on the
challenge of protecting citizens.
I love seeing the "Serve and Protect" and the various other slogans
on police cars. That is not what I would call Shared Values. Moreover,
with the state of current affairs it appears I would be right.
Shared Values—The end all?
I am afraid having shared values is not the end all. It is the best start. Developing leadership skills and capabilities
at the lowest levels is also important. That is the subject of another
article. Having Shared Values works for all organizations.
What are your Shared Values?
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www.FortitudeConsult.com; John@FortitudeConsult.com
© 2014 by John Boggs all rights reserved.
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