Police Math.Among Bill Clinton's campaign promises in 1992 was to put 100,000 new cops on America's streets by the end of the decade. Seven years later, this plan, like many administration initiatives, rests in tatters tat·ter 1 n. 1. A torn and hanging piece of cloth; a shred. 2. tatters Torn and ragged clothing; rags. tr. & intr.v. even as the president declares it a success. A Department of Justice audit of the Community Oriented o·ri·ent n. 1. Orient The countries of Asia, especially of eastern Asia. 2. a. The luster characteristic of a pearl of high quality. b. A pearl having exceptional luster. 3. Policing Service program (COPS) reveals that far fewer new police officers will be hired than expected. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the report, only 59,765 officers funded by COPS will actually be on patrol by next year. Amazingly, program officials don't even pretend that they will meet their target: They only plan on processing applications for 100,000 new cops by next year. Concluded the DOJ's auditor, "This is significantly different from having 100,000 new officers... actually deployed to the streets." Even the 59,765 number is an overstatement o·ver·state tr.v. o·ver·stat·ed, o·ver·stat·ing, o·ver·states To state in exaggerated terms. See Synonyms at exaggerate. o . The report noted numerous irregularities in COPS estimates. For instance, officials included 7,722 positions in their total even though local police departments had turned down the funding for them. And 2,526 additional positions were counted even though the grantees have not yet received formal notification. The audit further revealed that COPS couldn't verify (1) To prove the correctness of data. (2) In data entry operations, to compare the keystrokes of a second operator with the data entered by the first operator to ensure that the data were typed in accurately. See validate. that the new officers were assigned as·sign tr.v. as·signed, as·sign·ing, as·signs 1. To set apart for a particular purpose; designate: assigned a day for the inspection. 2. to patrol duties or ensure that local police departments would retain them beyond an initial three-year grant period, the two major concerns of the program's critics. In fact, 75 percent of cities sampled by the audit could not demonstrate that they had pulled officers off desk duty and redeployed them to the street, another goal of the program. What's more, most cities have never drafted plans for paying their COPS hires once federal funding expires. Worse still, the report revealed that 60 municipalities, including Atlanta, used the grants to pay for current staff instead of new hires. |
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