Created in the middle of President Bill Clinton's first term,
the Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS ) program[1]
promised to put 100,000 new state and local law enforcement
officers on the street by 2000. Critics said that COPS would fail
to meet this goal and that state and local governments would do
what they always do when the federal government subsidizes any core
responsibility of state or local governments: stop paying for it
themselves and become dependent on funding from Washington. The
critics were right on both counts.
As a crime-reduction policy, the COPS program failed to live up
to its sponsors' rhetoric and promises, never putting 100,000
additional police officers on America's streets.[2] Undaunted by the
program's failure to meet its most important public goals and in
response to considerable lobbying by state and local
law-enforcement officials, the House of Representatives recently
passed the "COPS Improvements Act of 2009" (H.R. 1139), which is
estimated to cost $5.4 billion from 2010 through 2014 plus an
additional $3.6 billion thereafter.[3] The companion bill in the
Senate, S. 167, is awaiting consideration. Both bills encourage
state and local governments to be fiscally irresponsible and to
become ever more dependent on Washington for criminal law
enforcement, an area that is--and must remain--a core
responsibility of state and local governments.
Exacerbating Existing Problems
The intent of H.R. 1139 and S. 167 appears to be to encourage
state and local law enforcement to become increasingly dependent on
federal funding. Both bills would also bolster the false public
perception that ordinary street crime is a federal responsibility.
This would prompt state and local officials who fail to devote
adequate resources to criminal law enforcement to shift
accountability for fighting and punishing local crime to the
federal government. The bill's provisions are chock full of
specific shortcomings.
Reauthorization of Hiring Grants. Reauthorization of the
COPS program's hiring grants, as intended by both bills, would
perpetuate the federal government's constitutionally questionable
practice of subsidizing the routine operations of state and local
law enforcement. These federal grants do not vindicate any uniquely
federal interest or fulfill any unique role or responsibility that
the Constitution has assigned to the federal government.
Without question, the best government entities to determine the
funding needs and priorities of state and local law enforcement are
state and local governments themselves. State and local officials
are far more likely to be knowledgeable about, and properly
responsive to, the actual needs and interests of the local
communities that are directly affected by local crime and law
enforcement.
Unlimited Renewal of Hiring Grants. For all of its
problems, the previous COPS legislation at least had the virtue of
limiting the length of time a governmental entity could receive
hiring grants to three years. Yet H.R. 1139 and S. 167 would allow
the COPS office to renew previous awards of hiring or retention
grants perpetually. Once a grantee receives an award, the grantee
could expect permanent federal funding.
This change would essentially establish a new federal
entitlement for localities in an area of governmental
authority--the general police power--that has always and
fundamentally been reserved for the states.
Hiring Grants to Retain Non-COPS-Funded Officers.H.R.
1139 and S. 167 encourage COPS hiring grants to be used for officer
retention. Thus, they should no longer be (mis-)named "hiring
grants." COPS funding is fungible: After a COPS grant expires, the
grantee can keep officers formerly funded by COPS but lay off
officers in non-COPS-funded positions. The grantee can then apply
for new COPS hiring grants to "hire" the laid-off officers. This
practice makes police departments even more dependent on the
federal government.
Ending Incentives for State and Local Governments to
Contribute.The current COPS program requires grant recipients
to pay at least 25 percent of the total funding for any program or
project funded in part by a COPS grant.[4] The attorney general is
expressly authorized to grant preferential treatment to applicants
who commit to contributing more than 25 percent.[5] Both H.R. 1139 and
S. 167 would eliminate this preferential treatment, ending an
important incentive for state and local governments to become
self-sufficient.
For COPS hiring grants that provide funding for three years,
current law also requires state and local governments to pay an
increasingly larger share of the salaries each year. Even those
Members of Congress who believe that some federal funding of law
enforcement may be warranted should recognize that the reasonable
goal of this state-funding requirement is to help ensure the
"continuation of the increased hiring level using State or local
sources of funding following the conclusion of Federal support."[6] Yet
H.R. 1139 and S. 167 would eliminate this reasonable requirement,
discouraging grantees from self-financing COPS-funded positions
after their grants expire. In addition, both bills eliminate even
the requirement that grantees develop a plan for increasing their
responsibility for financing COPS-funded officers. Further, H.R.
1139 greatly increases local law-enforcement agencies' dependence
on federal funding by lengthening each grant-funding period from
three years to five years. Each of the foregoing changes would
accelerate the move toward nationalizing state and local law
enforcement.
Elimination of the $75,000-per-Officer Cap. Current law
caps COPS grants at $75,000 per officer. H.R. 1139 and S. 167 would
eliminate this cap: The federal contribution per officer would be
unlimited. Eliminating the salary cap for COPS-funded positions not
only invites escalating salaries and other abuses at the federal
taxpayer's expense, but it ensures that an even larger percentage
of high-salary police chiefs and supervisors will owe their
livelihood to Washington--and join the cadre of law-enforcement
supplicants and lobbyists who regularly descend on Capitol Hill
seeking more federal money.
A New COPS Program for State and Local Prosecutors. No
longer content with only increasing federal-funding dependency for
police departments, the sponsors of H.R. 1139 and S. 167 want to
create a new program to fund the salaries of "community
prosecutors." This new funding would impose all of the problems
created by COPS onto district attorneys and other state and local
prosecutors. Short of commandeering local law-enforcement agencies
and "authorizing" federal officials to direct their efforts, using
federal funds to pay the salaries of state and local prosecutors is
apparently the next logical--and highly objectionable--step toward
nationalizing all state and local law enforcement.
Elimination of Oversight Measures. Nothing may be more
emblematic of the intent underlying S. 167 than the removal of COPS
from the jurisdiction and oversight of the Department of Justice's
Office of Audit, Assessment, and Management (OAAM). OAAM was
created in 2006 to ensure that Department of Justice grantees
comply with financial grant conditions.
It has become apparent that conflicting objectives and
constituent politics have interfered with the implementation and
effective monitoring of COPS grants. If COPS is ever to be more
than a federal subsidy for a core state responsibility, an agency
outside of the COPS office must have the authority to audit grants
and ensure compliance with grant conditions. With the documented
history of waste, fraud, and abuse by COPS grantees,[7]
removing COPS from OAAM's jurisdiction would send a clear signal to
COPS grantees that they are not expected to comply with grant
conditions.
The COPS program has an
extensive track record of poor performance and should be
eliminated. It has failed to achieve its goals and has assigned to
the federal government responsibilities that fall squarely within
the expertise, jurisdiction, and constitutional responsibilities of
state and local governments. COPS is a flawed program now in
desperate search of a bona fide mission.
The Wrong Approach
The COPS Improvements Acts of 2009 takes precisely the wrong
approach. By bolstering the false public perception that ordinary
street crime is a federal responsibility, H.R. 1139 and S. 167
would encourage state and local officials to become permanent
supplicants for federal COPS funding. Furthermore, these bills will
continue to shift accountability for fighting local crime away from
state and local officials and onto the federal government.
David B.
Muhlhausen, Ph.D., is Senior Policy Analyst in the Center for
Data Analysis and Brian W. Walsh is Senior Legal Research Fellow
in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.
[1]COPS
was one of dozens of new spending programs for state and local law
enforcement contained in the Violent Crime Control and Law
Enforcement Act of 1994, Public Law 103-322.
[2]For
additional information on the COPS program, see David B.
Muhlhausen, "Adding COPS Funding to the Economic Stimulus Package
Will Not Stimulate the Economy, Nor Will It Effectively Combat
Crime," testimony before the Committee on the Judiciary, U.S.
Senate, January 8, 2009, at http://www.heritage.org/Research/Economy/tst011409a.cfm;
David B. Muhlhausen and Brian W. Walsh, "COPS Reform: Why Congress
Can't Make the COPS Program Work," Heritage Foundation
Backgrounder No. 2188, September 26, 2008, at http://www.heritage.org/Research/Crime/bg2188.cfm.
[3]Congressional Budget Office, "H.R. 1139, COPS
Improvement Act of 2009," Cost Estimate, April 15, 2009.
[4]42
United States Code § 3796dd(g).
[7]Muhlhausen and Walsh, "COPS Reform" (analyzing
a few of the many examples of waste, fraud, and abuse by state and
local jurisdictions that received COPS grants under the current
program).