NJ Cops Feb2019 | Page 22

CORRECTIONS Hats off Hats off to the thousands of federal correction- al officers who patrolled our nation’s federal pris- ons without pay for nearly a month. These men and women continued to show up for work, day after day, never knowing what they were walking into. If no one else will, I think we should thank them here. I don’t know too many people who could go a month without pay and not feel the stress. (With BRIAN a 34 percent PTSD rate, that’s the last thing we DAWE need!) Undoubtedly, this added stress led to more sick calls, resulting in more mandatory overtime shifts and a downward spiral of staff morale. Yet despite it all, these officers kept the lid on. At ACOIN, we monitor national media reports every morn- ing and periodically throughout the day. During the 35-day shutdown, we did not read of one major incident in the feder- al prison system. They did their jobs, without pay and without hesitation. Hats off! This situation has led to an important question: which professions are “non-essential” in the eyes of the federal gov- ernment? Is law enforcement not “essential” in protecting the safety of the public and upholding our nation’s laws? The government’s number one function is to protect the nation, externally through our armed forces and intelligence agencies and internally through the Coast Guard, LEOs and firefight- ers. None of these agencies serve a “lesser” purpose than the others. All have their roles in the matrix of organizations that protect the public and our country. If corrections is not “es- sential,” then it’s time to re-evaluate what is when it comes to pulling the plug in a shutdown of the government. It’s not as if the tax dollars stop flowing in; it’s a matter of priority as to whom the government is willing to pay during a self-imposed shutdown. Congress never missed a paycheck. The government counts on our loyalty, our professionalism, the sanctity of our oath and our willingness to do a job that very few people would even consider. They praise us and de- cry the deplorable conditions we work in when one of us suc- cumbs to the dangers of the job, but then abandon us to the whims of politics? Although we welcome the recognition our profession re- ceives each year during Correctional Officers Week, most of us would prefer that the dangers we face and sacrifices we make were recognized by filling our vacant positions. Be honored by seeking legislation and funding for minimum staffing levels to better ensure the safety of everyone behind the walls. Be acknowledged by reinstituting pre-shift briefings (roll call) in order to keep staff informed before we commence our next tour. We would prefer that our dedication be respected by providing training at the academy on how to recognize and deal with PTSD and by recognizing PTSD as a presumptive illness associated directly with our line of work. By seeking 22 NEW JERSEY COPS ■ FEBRUARY 2019 appropriate funding to provide adequate staff to meet annual training requirements for all personnel and decrease forced overtime. By paying salaries commensurate with other LEOs in our profession. By publicly bemoaning the return to prison privatization as an anathema to public safety. By releasing the real numbers on staffing, training and staff-to-inmate ratios on assaults, prosecutions and communicable diseases. I am certainly fed up with attitudes regarding our profession in general, but this “non-essential” BS has to be challenged. This shutdown and denial of pay happened at the federal lev- el. What if it happens at the state or county level? Is it incon- ceivable that governors, legislators or rogue county executives would refuse to fund the budget impacting public employees’ salaries over a political battle? In today’s divided nation, it’s more probable than not. When I heard some of the comments from politicians on both sides of the shutdown, I was stunned by the disconnect. How is public safety a bargaining chip? How do they sleep at night when they knowingly treat people’s lives as game pieces? These are the people who put their very lives on the line every time they punch the clock, and whose families live with that knot way down in the pit of their stomachs knowing the risks their loved ones face on the job. This situation was a disgrace; I don’t care what the reason was. Any public employee whose primary function is the protec- tion of our nation and its citizens should be exempt from de- cisions that would require them to work without being paid, and within the same time frame as they would be normally. This language could be easily included in our contracts, or preferably enacted as legislation. We’ve learned two things from this shutdown: first, that our profession is comprised of some of the most dedicated men and women in the nation; and second, that we have to enact legislation that protects us from future shutdowns. Until then, hats off to the federal correctional officers who weathered this buffoonery, and shame on Congress and the White House for so callously playing with people’s lives and livelihoods. To quote a well-known football coach, “Do your job.” We’re doing ours. Brian Dawe spent 16 years as a state correctional officer in Mas- sachusetts, beginning on May 31, 1982. He is a co-founder of the Massachusetts Correction Officers Federated Union, adminis- trator for the Corrections and Criminal Justice Coalition and executive director for Corrections USA and the American Cor- rectional Officer. He is the originator and owner of the Ameri- can Correctional Officer Intelligence Network.