The Richland County Sheriff’s Department’s “Peace Officer” initiative is changing public perception

Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott (third from left) and RCSD new Peace Officer vehicle designation is improving community relations.

COLUMBIA, S.C. – In Jan. 2018, the Richland County Sheriff’s Dept. (RCSD) became the first sheriff’s office, nationwide, to add the words PEACE OFFICER to several of its marked patrol vehicles, ultimately its entire fleet of marked vehicles. That’s 600-plus vehicles. RCSD was selected along with the Redlands (CA) Police Dept. to be the two pilot programs for the new identity initiative, and several LE agencies around the country have since been brought into the fold. Why was RCSD chosen as one of the first two? “Simple, it’s the Sheriff and his really good relationship with those within the communities served by RCSD,” says Lisa Broderick, executive director of Police2Peace, a national non-profit which is facilitating the project and the accompanying research being conducted by the Joint Public Policy Institute (betagov.org) of New York University and UCLA. “RCSD was perfect for this program because of the obvious importance we saw Sheriff Leon Lott placing on commitment, discernment, fair-mindedness, honesty, transparency and compassion within the department. He saw that if the PEACE OFFICER reminder could get officers to see the perspective of another, to enhance compassion, then it would be worthwhile.”

Broderick added, “Sheriff Lott perceived that reminders like the PEACE OFFICER identity initiative tend to engender an awareness and compassion that can shift how officers show up to situations in the community, which then changes the energy of the encounter for the better.”

The research began with what Broderick refers to us a “randomized controlled trial” wherein a few of RCSD’s eight regions (excluding Region 5, which is the judicial “county courthouse” unit) had the decaled wording placed on vehicles for the initial six months. Following the six-month period, decals were placed on all vehicles in all of the county’s regions. Those surveyed during the research included RCSD deputies, employees, and the citizens living and working within the county’s various communities.

The numbers show good existing relations between RCSD and the community. Among the community members surveyed since early 2018, nearly 90 percent “strongly agreed” that the community “is generally very supportive” of RCSD. Some 80-plus percent “strongly agreed” that RCSD “makes efforts to engage and educate the community on law enforcement matters.” Nearly 90 percent “strongly agreed” that they as individuals “have enjoyed a good relationship” with RCSD. And nearly 95 percent “strongly agreed” that the department “should devote time to familiarizing its personnel with the concerns of the community while also being a strong law enforcement presence.”

Some of program’s more interesting findings as regards the PEACE OFFICER decals, include: More than 75 percent of those within the community who had seen the decals “strongly agreed” that “the community is generally safe” as opposed to only 55 percent who did not see the decals but whom also believe the community is generally safe.

When the question was posed, “Do you think people can change?” nearly 90 percent who saw the decals “strongly agreed” as opposed to about 65 percent who did not see the decals.

When asked if they perceived the department’s deputies as being “’guardians’ rather than ‘warriors,’” over 70 percent who saw the decals “strongly agreed” as opposed to 55 percent who did not see the decals.

“We do so much more than simply enforce the law,” says Lott. “We do enforce the law to be sure, but peace officer is a more accurate description of who we are and what we do. We are keeping the peace. We’re building relationships. And we’re educating the citizens we serve as how best to safeguard themselves from all threats.”

Lott adds, “With the words PEACE OFFICER on our cars, we are getting people to talk about what a peace officer really is. We are changing perceptions and we are redefining what we do and what being a peace officer means to us individually and as a department.”

Broderick agrees. “This initiative is working, here with RCSD and elsewhere,” she says. “We have presented it to numerous departments nationwide, including police departments, sheriff’s offices, state and federal law enforcement agencies, and we are now in the pilot or planning stages with a dozen or so.”

Broderick says to make the initiative work it has to appeal to the departments. There must be numbers demonstrating that it works. And there must be “buy in” from the communities. All three are coming together for the departments that we are working with and changing the culture for the better, she says.

– For more information about the peace officer initiative, please visit police2peace.com.

 

New York Times bestselling editor W. Thomas Smith Jr. is a former U.S. Marine infantry leader and counterterrorism instructor, a tactical (SWAT) team officer in the nuclear industry and retired colonel with the S.C. Military Dept. An award-winning military analyst and military technical advisor, Smith serves as a special deputy with the Richland County Sheriff’s Dept. and is the director of RCSD’s Elder Abuse Awareness Team.