Evansville Police Department Receives Reaccreditation.

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In 1994, the Evansville Police Department became an accredited law enforcement agency through the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc., (CALEA). Since then the department has remained an accredited agency. On Saturday, the Evansville Police Department was reaccredited for the eighth time by CALEA at its conference in Frisco, Texas. According to CALEA less than five percent of police agencies in the United States are accredited. Being an accredited agency is the result of the professionalism, hard work and dedication to service of all the men and women who work for the department. The department individually recognizes the department’s Accreditation Manager, Lieutenant Scott Doan, for all his efforts in directing this reaccreditation cycle.

The Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc., (CALEA) was created in 1979 as a credentialing authority thr ough the joint efforts of law enforcement’s major executive associations:

• International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP)
• National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE)
• National Sheriffs’ Association (NSA)
• Police Executive Research Forum (PERF)

The purpose of CALEA’s Accreditation Programs is to improve the delivery of public safety services, primarily by: maintaining a body of standards, developed by public safety practitioners, covering a wide range of up-to-date public safety initiatives; establishing and administering an accreditation process; and recognizing professional excellence.

Specifically, CALEA’s goals are to:

• Strengthen crime prevention and control capabilities; • Formalize essential management procedures; • Establish fair and nondiscriminatory personnel practices; • Improve service delivery; • Solidify interagency cooperation and coordination; and • Inc rease community and staff confidence in the agency.

The CALEA Accreditation Process is a proven modern management model; once implemented, it presents the Chief Executive Officer (CEO), on a continuing basis, with a blueprint that promotes the efficient use of resources and improves service delivery—regardless of the size, geographic location, or functional responsibilities of the agency.

This accreditation program provides public safety agencies an opportunity to voluntarily demonstrate that they meet an established set of professional standards which:

• Require an agency to develop a comprehensive, well thought out, uniform set of written directives. This is one of the most successful methods for reaching administrative and operational goals, while also providing direction to personnel.
• Provide the necessary reports and analyses a CEO needs to make fact-based, informed management decisions.
• Require a preparedness program be pu t in place—so an agency is ready to address natural or man-made critical incidents.
• Are a means for developing or improving upon an agency’s relationship with the community.
• Strengthen an agency’s accountability, both within the agency and the community, through a continuum of standards that clearly define authority, performance, and responsibilities.
• Can limit an agency’s liability and risk exposure because it demonstrates that internationally recognized standards for law enforcement have been met, as verified by a team of independent outside CALEA-trained assessors.
Facilitates an agency’s pursuit of professional excellence.