Saxby Chambliss

United States Senator for Georgia

 
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CHAMBLISS, ISAKSON WORK TO MEET NEEDS OF RURAL LAW ENFORCEMENT COMMUNITY


February 28, 2007


WASHINGTON—U.S. Senators Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., and Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., have co-sponsored legislation to assist Georgia’s law enforcement personnel by creating a special, rural-focused law enforcement training institute.  Chambliss and Isakson were sponsors of a similar measure during the last Congress and successfully amended the Port Security Bill to include the creation of a Rural Policing Institute. It was removed from the bill during negotiations to resolve differences between the House and the Senate versions of the bill.
                                                                                                                                        
“As we continue to call upon our rural law enforcement to do more, we must provide them with access to specialized training where it otherwise would not be available,” said Chambliss.  “In many areas, increased crime and the scourge of methamphetamine drug trafficking have placed severe pressures on local law enforcement capabilities, and I believe this measure is critically important for states like Georgia where rural areas encompass a large area of the state.”  
 
“By having a program where we can send instructors to these rural police departments, we maximize our training capabilities and ensure that these officers are able to receive on the job training without reducing manpower,” Isakson said. “This program is a win-win for our law enforcement personnel, FLETC and the American taxpayer.”  
 
Rural law enforcement agencies often face a difficult challenge in receiving up-to-date training, with tight budgets and small staffs frequently forced to make a choice between training opportunities and keeping officers on the street.  The Rural Policing Institute is unique in that experts will be deployed directly to rural communities and provide at-home training on a local level for individuals who may not otherwise have access to specialized training opportunities.
 
The Rural Policing Institute would be administered by the Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC), located in Glynco, Ga.  FLETC, currently the training hub for over 80 federal agencies, also houses the Office of State and Local Training, a convenient infrastructure for exporting training expertise to local law enforcement agencies.  Each year, staff from FLETC’s Office of State and Local Training travel to approximately 30 states and put on over 60 training programs.
 
Building off of the success of the Office of State and Local Training, the Rural Policing Institute would be empowered to work with rural law enforcement agencies to assess training needs specific to rural law enforcement, develop and export specially-tailored rural training programs and work to ensure these rural law enforcement agencies are aware of new training opportunities. 
 
The bill is also sponsored by U.S. Senators Ken Salazar, D-Colo., and Mark Pryor, D-Ark.




February 2007 Press Releases