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At a time when law enforcement agencies throughout Wisconsin are struggling due to a recruitment crisis, a state board quietly changed a rule that is making it worse.
Noah Gausman just wanted to continue being a cop. But the Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board won’t let him, for reasons that are baffling.
It’s all because of a quiet state policy change made in 2021, during the “defund the police movement,” that is imperiling the ability of law enforcement agencies throughout Wisconsin to hire former part-time officers, which many rely on. Gausman’s is just one case, but it’s revealing.
Gausman, a single father raising his son after the boy’s mother’s death, had been a cop since 2015, after completing hundreds of hours of law enforcement officer training at a local tech college, and then working part-time for the Balsam Lake, Star Prairie and Frederic Police Departments. On Sept. 1, 2022, he resigned from the Star Prairie Police Department. On May 26, 2023, he was hired by the Balsam Lake Water Safety Patrol as a part-time police officer.
Noah Gausman
Because he had been out of law enforcement for more than one day – specifically in his case nine months before being hired by the Balsam Lake Water Safety Patrol – the state board said that he and Balsam Lake were out of luck. That’s even though he left the other departments in good standing.
Washington County Sheriff Marty Schulteis told WRN that he was aware of this policy change but was certain many part-time officers are not.
Schulteis said that his agency relies on part-time deputies for a variety of public safety missions that include security checkpoints at the Justice Center, prisoner conveyances, and special assignments at community events such as the county fair, after-hours school functions, and other special security events.
His agency employs about 20 part-time officers.
Washington County Sheriff Marty Schulteis
Schulteis continued, “What the policy does not take into consideration are the full-time officers that retire and then pick up a part-time job for a period. If they have any break in service, they fall under the new policy even if they have decades of full-time experience. We have had individuals that fall into this category after retiring and moving to Washington County. We are now not able to utilize that level of experience after the change. For the agencies that utilize part-time help, this simply makes the recruitment even more difficult in a time where staffing public safety personnel is already challenging.”
Tom Kelly, chairman of the Board of the Balsam Lake Protection and Rehabilitation District, wrote the Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board and said that the Balsam Lake board was “surprised and disappointed” by the decision to deny Gausman certification. He said that the water patrol agency hires all officers on a part-time basis “and we struggle to find qualified part-time officers.”
“From what I have read, small towns throughout the state are having problems staffing their departments. I find it hard to understand why the LES board is making it difficult for part-time officers who are in good standing to continue to work,” wrote Kelly.
Wisconsin Right Now has learned that, prior to March 2, 2021, all law enforcement officers in Wisconsin had three years to regain employment without going through lengthy and costly training again. However, on that date, the board added the word “full-time,” leaving part-time officers in limbo.
That decision resulted in part-time officers losing their certification if they don’t find a new law enforcement job the day AFTER they leave a department, preventing well-qualified people from working in law enforcement at a time of a recruitment crisis. Some are seasonal hires.
The Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board is a policy-making body under the jurisdiction of Attorney General Josh Kaul’s office. The change is affecting agencies from city police departments to sheriff’s departments to tribal police forces to seasonal positions patrolling lakes.
It’s one of those technical changes that can have sweeping impact on people’s lives, public safety, and local departments, many of which rely on part-time police officers.
It all boiled down to the insertion of a single word.
The change, for which there is seemingly no clear rhyme nor reason, comes as Wisconsin’s number of law enforcement officers has plummeted. Repeated requests to the DOJ, the Training and Standards Bureau, and board members went unanswered.
Since 2008, the number of law enforcement officers in the state has dropped by 1,000 officers. That number includes full-time officers. That comes as crime has spiked throughout Wisconsin.
Yet, the board’s policy change prevents part-time police officers from keeping their certification to take new law enforcement jobs, if there is any gap at all between employment, even one day. Full-time officers retain their certification for three years after leaving a force. Part-time officers get no time.
Part-Time Officers
Law enforcement agencies employ part-time officers to support patrol functions, conduct prisoner conveyances, and staff events like county fairs, and seasonal positions like boat patrols. These positions are often filled by retired police officers or people with other full-time careers.
For example, the Big Bend Police Department in Waukesha County has 3 full-time and 9 part-time officers.
A check of WILENET, a resource website for Wisconsin law enforcement, shows at least 20 agencies currently advertising for part-time law enforcement positions.
Currently, Wisconsin law enforcement recruits must undergo a 720-hour, 18-week course at a police academy which typically costs $5,000 to $6,000.
Part-time officers are typically paid an hourly rate lower than full-time officers and usually do not receive typical employee benefits like health insurance.
Kewaskum Police Chief Tom Bishop
Kewaskum Police Chief Tom Bishop also expressed concerns, saying, “I do see some issues with this change. Part-time officers are extremely valuable to smaller agencies around the State, especially those part-time agencies that run a boat patrol or other type of seasonal enforcement.”
Bishop continued, “A department looking to hire an experienced part-time officer is very unlikely to hire and pay an officer who needs to attend the academy for their first 720 hours (4½ months) of employment just because they lost their certification due to being out of law enforcement for a very short period of time. What if the officer’s employment ended due to something out of their control, such as a small department. I am not sure why the LESB would’ve changed this language.”
Gausman told WRN, “The DOJ not only took my certification; they took my job away from me. They took an employee away from the police department.”
“I was working when all of this happened. And I hadn’t just started. I was approved by the police department to work,” he said. I was approved by the DOJ to work with no red flags or issues. This board and the DOJ have no idea how detrimental this is to me, my livelihood, or the future to law enforcement in Wisconsin.”
The board does consider appeals from officers in cases like Gausman.
Gausman wrote a lengthy letter to the Law Enforcement Standards Board. In it, he indicated that he thought the three-year policy was still in place.
He said he left the Village of Balsam Lake Police Department when the department disbanded. He went part-time after his son’s mother passed away and he was “tasked with being a full-time single father and needed the flexibility of part-time employment to take care and provide for him.”
“I absolutely love working in Law Enforcement, and I take it very seriously. I don’t believe I should be penalized for working part-time,” Gausman said.
Thomas J. Thompson, chief of the Balsam Lake Water Safety Patrol, also wrote to the board.
“Many agencies in NW Wisconsin rely on part-time staff; the Balsam Lake Water Safety Patrol is one of those agencies. I am hoping that Officer Gausman will not be penalized for being a part-time officer, who has left any prior agencies in good standing…The Balsam Lake Water Safety Patrol would like to have Officer Gausman on our staff for many years to come,” Thompson said.
LESB Denied Gausman’s Appeal
The board was unmoved.
On Sept. 7, 2023, the board denied Gausman’s request and said he would have to complete a full 720-hour law enforcement preparatory training academy to become a police officer again.
Gausman wrote the board another letter saying he was “very disheartened” that his waiver was denied, adding, “Being in law enforcement is something I’ve always wanted to be a part of, and it was my dream career even before I could talk. To be a police officer is something I had worked very hard for, as I am the only one in my family to go to college. I paid my own way alongside of some student loans to assist me in getting a degree in law enforcement and becoming a police officer.”
Dodge County Sheriff Dale Schmidt has a different take. Schmidt is the president of the Badger State Sheriff’s Association. Schmidt told WRN, “The Sheriffs and Chiefs in Wisconsin have representation on the LESB and as such, BSSA receives reports back from those sheriffs at our meetings. In, fact, the chair of the committee is a Sheriff. The information is also posted and available to everyone on the WILENET website for all law enforcement and even the public to be able to review as far as what the standards are.”
“It is a difficult thing to make sure that the law enforcement officers we have in the state are properly trained and ready to deal with the challenges law enforcement faces every day,” he added. “Without proper training, there can be a significant liability to the people we serve, and it puts law enforcement in a difficult position to do the job as safely as possible for the citizens and our employees’ well-being. In my opinion, we have the best trained law enforcement officers in the country because we have high standards. Anyone who fails to meet the standards will need to be re-trained to keep our citizens safe.”
However, to be clear, the rule change is not about officers with performance issues or who fail to meet training standards. It’s about immediately de-certifying part-time officers when they separate from an agency.
The Out-of-State Reciprocity Contradiction
A few years ago, the Board instituted a rule that allowed for the reciprocity of officers from other states. The rule allows out-of-state officers to WAIVE the 720-hour basic training requirement if they worked at least one year full-time within the last 3 years in their home state.
This means an out-of-state officer with one year of experience who left just under 3 years ago is granted a waiver of the 720-hour recruit training over a Wisconsin-trained officer who has worked part-time for many years but has a gap of employment of even just one day.
Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board
The Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board is made up of various law enforcement officials throughout the state. Currently, the Milwaukee and Dane County Sheriffs are among those on the board, as is the Democratic DA of La Crosse. The makeup of the board was different in 2021.
At the March 2, 2021, these board members were in attendance, according to the minutes:
LESB MEMBERS
Robert Botsch
Todd Delain
Chris Domagalski
Jean Galasinski
Jennifer Harper
Casey Krueger
Scott Parks
Kurt Picknell
James Small
Charles Tubbs
Tina Virgil
Michelle Viste
LESB STAFF
Ronald Betley
Carol Curfman
Stacy Lenz
Katie Maule
Jerry Mullen
Stephanie Pederson
Thessa Phillips
Dan Ruzinski
Shelly Sandry
Frank Sullivan
Dana Vike
Steve Wagner
The minutes are vague. They say, “LESB Policy and Procedures Manual Updates and Academy Director’s Manual Updates. The LESB was presented with changes to the LESB Policy and Procedures Manual and the Academy Director’s Manual. Motion to accept staff recommendations on changes to the LESB Policy and Procedures Manual and the Academy Director’s Manual. Move by Kurt Picknell, second Michelle Viste. Motion carried unanimously.”
Bureaucratic Wall of Silence
For this story, we reached out to several staff and board members of the Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board including Bureau Director Ron Betley and Curriculum & Certification Staff Supervisor Dana Vike.
Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board Bureau Director Ron Betley
We wanted to how many part-time officers there are in the state, how many officers have been affected by the rule change, who was responsible for this rule change and why it happened.
ALL questions were ignored, and we were finally directed to WI Department of Justice media relations for those questions.
Phone calls and emails to the DOJ resulted in no response.
For a follow-up story, any law enforcement officers or administrators who would like to comment on this rule change or any legislators who are interested in this issue, please email us at [email protected].
This article originally appeared at Wisconsin Right Now and was reprinted with permission.
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