THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

Critics say budget leaves state police dozens short

Email|Print| Text size + By Dave Gram
Associated Press Writer / February 21, 2008

MONTPELIER, Vt.—A chronic staffing shortage in the Vermont State Police is likely to get worse due to a $3 million budget shortfall coupled with a lack of recruits in training, officials say.

On Thursday, the president pro tem and Judiciary Committee chairman in the Vermont Senate joined the heads of the state police union and the Vermont League of Cities and Towns to lay the blame for the situation at the feet of Gov. Jim Douglas.

"The governor's rhetoric on public safety has not matched his actions," said the president pro tem, Sen. Peter Shumlin, D-Windham. He released a chart showing a continuing staffing gap since Douglas became governor in 2003 -- one that had existed under the previous governor, Howard Dean, as well.

The State Police were authorized to have 345 sworn officers, ranging from trooper to colonel, in 2004; the force had 296 of the positions actually filled. In the current year, 348 positions are authorized; 303 are filled, Shumlin's chart said.

Public Safety Commissioner Thomas Tremblay, a former Burlington police chief just appointed to his new job in January, disputed Shumlin's assertion that the numbers showed a lack of commitment by Douglas to fighting crime.

"I think Sen. Shumlin, quite frankly, is wrong on this," he said. He said he had spent his first six weeks on the job going through the department's budget, looking for "operational efficiencies," and preparing a plan to address staffing issues.

Tremblay repeated a lament shared by many police agency leaders in recent times: the difficulty in finding recruits to fill slots. Tremblay also expressed annoyance that Shumlin had decided to organize his news conference before discussing the concerns with him.

"I was really confused by the fact that Sen. Shumlin didn't reach out to me, the commissioner of public safety, to hear my concerns and talk about my plan for the future staffing of the state police," Tremblay said.

One issue raised by the senators was state police recruiting of local officers to join the usually better-paying state force. Sen. Richard Sears, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, recalled on instance in which the town department in Wilmington lost three of its five officers to the State Police in one year.

Tremblay said later that staff shortages and competition for recruits are being felt by police departments around the country.

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