06/25/2026
BUDDY CHECK: THE BADGE WEARS MANY HATS - When you call 911, you’re not just calling “the police.” You’re calling someone trained to be a crisis counselor, a mediator, a first responder, an investigator, and sometimes a social worker, all in the same shift.
A Officer might start the night at a community event, respond to a domestic disturbance, sit with a family during a death notification, then talk someone through a mental health crisis. Each of those calls requires a different skill set. All of them require the same person to show up calm, capable, and ready.
This isn’t a complaint, it’s context. Our communities have leaned on law enforcement partners to fill gaps that other systems haven’t kept pace with: mental health response, addiction, homelessness, youth issues. Officers answer that call because that’s the job. But it also means we have to be honest about what it takes to do this work well: proper training, adequate staffing, and real support for the people wearing the badge: internally, through training and resources, and externally, through community partnership.
Our leaders should continue to commitment to making sure our Officers have what they need to handle this responsibility in our rapidly growing county, to enhance their abilities to provide highly trained law enforcement services, and to work with our community so law enforcement isn’t standing alone at the intersection of every problem we haven’t solved together.
This is the reality of 21st century policing. Our Officers answer the call day in and day out. Training, funding, resources, and professional development are imperative to set them up for success at serving you | 🇺🇸⚫️🔵⚫️🇺🇸