Archive for August, 2008

27
Aug

Below is the latest radio spot from the Portsmouth Fraternal Order of Police Lodge. They are attempting to generate support among the citizens of Portsmouth for better pay for the Portsmouth Police Officers. I fully support this endeavor and wish them well on a quest that typically falls on deaf ears in the Portsmouth City Council.

Over the previous 10 years the City of Portsmouth has provided significant pay raises to the executive staff of the City, i.e. City Manager, City Attorney etc. The pay raises given to the general and public safety employees has been significantly less during the same period. I am in the process of collecting and processing 10 years worth of City of Portsmouth Pay Plans to document this inequitable distribution of pay raises. Hopefully I will have that post ready in the next week or so.

Click to the right to hear the latest FOP Radio Spot Portsmouth FOP Radio Spot Number 2

If after you read my post or listen to the ad and want to help out, click the link below to go to the Portsmouth FOP page that has all the contact information to voice your concern to the Portsmouth City Council.

25
Aug

Chief Corvello to Stay !

Author: Admin

Email sent a little after 8pm tonight indicates that Chief Corvello met with City Council and they addressed his concerns. He has decided to stay.

That’s good news because the City of Portsmouth was not going to find anyone of Chief Corvello’s caliber, stature or experience.

Thanks Chief Corvello for staying ..

Click here for a copy of the email; Interim Chief William Corvello will be staying in Portsmouth

22
Aug

I had a good laugh today when I received an email with an audio attachment. It’s one of those funny things that’s sad. It starts off as a recruiting ad, kinda, but is actually a very well done parody of the current retention problems facing the Portsmouth Police Department. The Portsmouth Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) lodge had the ad made and is going to be airing it on various radio stations starting Monday.

I received permission to place it on my blog from one of the Officers of the Portsmouth FOP.

The Department has one very positive note for the junior officers that are hired. Once trained, then Department of Criminal Justice Services (DCJS) certified Basic Law Enforcement Officers they can then find a job at any other Commonwealth of Virginia Law Enforcement Agency. A little over 10 years ago the City of Portsmouth changed their retirement system from a city run pension plan to the Commonwealth of Virginia “Virginia Retirement System” (VRS). By doing this they made a city employees retirement “portable”. You can now leave Portsmouth, go to any other Virginia state agency or municipality that is also under VRS and continue on with all your time from Portsmouth credited to you under your new agency for your retirement.

When you look at the pay differential of the local police departments (click here for area police pay comparison) you will see that Portsmouth ranks at the very bottom for pretty much everything. The question then becomes, why would a Portsmouth Junior Police Officer stick around in Portsmouth when they can go almost anywhere and get a pay raise in the thousands of dollars. Given the turmoil, mismanagement, politics, unfair treatment, inadequate compensation and poor working conditions how can you blame them for leaving? You can’t, but that doesn’t seem to concern the City of Portsmouth. The starting salary of a Portsmouth Police Officer is in the neighborhood of $30,000. It takes about a year from start to finish to train one to become a patrol officer and get them DCJS certified. You are talking about losing an investment of about $40,000-$50,000 every time a trained police officer leaves the department. Because Portsmouth Officers do more with less, handle more varied types of police cases due to the high crime rate (click here for Hampton Roads cities crime statistics comparison for 2006) they are far more experienced in a few short years then most of the other departments in the area and are popular applicants with the other departments. These departments avoid the $40,000-$50,000 cost to train a new officer and the applicant gets a pay raise in the thousands of dollars depending on the department that hires them.

Click the link below to listen to the ad, it’s accurate, funny and sad.. Portsmouth FOP Radio Recruiting Ad

If after you read my post or listen to the ad and want to help out, click the link below to go to the Portsmouth FOP page that has all the contact information to voice your concern to the Portsmouth City Council.

20
Aug

City of Portsmouth Interim Chief of Police William Corvello submitted his resignation on August 18th after a little over 3 months on the job. (Click to see Chief Corvello’s resignation letter to City Manager Kenneth Chandler). The resignation has an effective date of September 1st 2008. Chief Corvello was Portsmouth Police Departments best hope of getting all the numerous problems fixed and getting morale up in a demoralized Police Department that is fraught with numerous management problems for years.

Their has been much conjecture about Chief Corvello leaving short of his employment contract requirements. The Chief was on a Month-to-Month contract since starting his employment on May 7th, 2008 (Click here to see Chief William Corvello’s employment contract). If a retired Superintendent of State Police with Chief Corvello’s stature can not fix the problems or is not given the cooperation by City of Portsmouth Officials he needs to fix the Police Department then who can? Certainly not the current upper management of the Portsmouth Police Department. They have a sorted past, part of the current problems and lack of accountability can be directly attributed to the shenanigans of certain members of the current executive staff. Very few of the rank and file officers have any confidence in them. I have some personal experience with several of them and will be relating some incidents that will demonstrate that the current upper level executive staff is not fit to be a Chief of Police in Portsmouth or anywhere else.

I have had numerous contacts with Chief Corvello during these past months. I have only good things to say about him. He was fair, personable and reasonable. He cared about the people that worked for him and it was apparent that he wanted to fix the numerous problems that have plagued the Police Department for years. Unfortunately his hands were tied, he was micro-managed by the Office of the City Manager. As you can see in the resignation letter, he was “backdoored” by the City Attorney at least once (and I suspect that was one of many occasions).

He was not given the authority to accomplish the tasks neccessary to implement positive and required changes to fix a broken Police Department. I suspect Chief Corvello had to get everything pre-approved before he was allowed to do anything. Chief Corvello publicly speaks very highly of his association with Portsmouth City Manager Kenneth Chandler but if that was really the case would he be resigning? I think not !

A man of Chief Corvello’s stature and experience should have been allowed to make the necessary decisions on his own and implement them. If Chief Corvello can’t fix the problems with his vast resume who can?

Their are still a number of issues (moral, ethical & legal) that have been covered up over the years that are going to come out. Their has been illegal activity within the upper management of the Police Department. Some that people are aware, (i.e. Lt. Ali) some that hasn’t come to light yet. Their have been transgressions committed by Portsmouth Police management in the past that they have never been held accountable for. The saying “Do as I say not as I do” is a fitting phrase to describe many in Portsmouth Police leadership positions. Part of the problem is that they are supervisors but not leaders, they lack the discipline to follow their own policies. Certain staff members have been involved in illegal spending of department funds, had sex with subordinate female civilian employee’s in there office and other various incidents.

I know that if I was the Chief of Police trying to be fair, do the right thing and hold people accountable for their actions and was told “no you can’t” I’d resign too.

It’s extremely doubtful once Chief Corvello leaves that their will be any forward progress made in fixing the Portsmouth Police Department. He was the cream-of-the-crop, it is doubtful they are going to find anyone with his experience and caliber again. That’s a shame, given that they had a guy capable of pulling it off and the Portsmouth City government let him get away. You hired the guy to fix the problems, guess you should have let him do the job you hired him for.

Farewell Chief Corvello, we know you gave it your best shot ..