Free: Contests & Raffles.
No way. We have enough cops and this would infringe on the authority of the county sheriffs. This bill should be dumped and I'm writing to my Senator and Reps to do so.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on January 17, 2014, 07:07:38 AMNo way. We have enough cops and this would infringe on the authority of the county sheriffs. This bill should be dumped and I'm writing to my Senator and Reps to do so.i have to agree! We don't need any more wanna be cops out there, I'm referring to the parks guys having guns and full LE authority.
Last year the DNR, LCB, and Parks bill had a committee hearing the same morning. The only opposition was WASPC and the Skamania County Sheriff. The Skamania County Sheriff is starting to get the reputation of being a radical in Olympia and legislators basically hammered him for turning these bills into a turf war. If you listed to his testimony, which turned into questioning you could hear him get frustrated and become upset.
Quote from: bigtex on January 17, 2014, 03:54:20 PMLast year the DNR, LCB, and Parks bill had a committee hearing the same morning. The only opposition was WASPC and the Skamania County Sheriff. The Skamania County Sheriff is starting to get the reputation of being a radical in Olympia and legislators basically hammered him for turning these bills into a turf war. If you listed to his testimony, which turned into questioning you could hear him get frustrated and become upset.I actually had the opportunity of running into a law enforcement legislative liaison type person yesterday and this bill came up in the discussion. They said in their opinion WASPC is really starting to look bad in the eyes of the legislators. I guess many legislators are starting to see the only reason they are opposed to such bills is a simply turf war. Last year a Public Safety Committee Representative actually asked the Skamania County Sheriff that if a LCB, DNR, or Parks LEO was behind an obvious DUI driver in his county would he want them to have the authority to pull that person over, the sheriff said no and that he would want his deputies to do so. Supposedly that statement kind of sent a buzz through the legislature. An actual sheriff saying he didn't want a DUI driver to be pulled over simply because the officer worked for LCB, DNR, or Parks. Kind of the opposite of public safety eh?They also believe that this is the first time an agency has actually requested general authority since around 2002 when WDFW did it. And the unofficial word is that the LCB will submit this type of legislation every year until it does pass.
Quote from: bigtex on January 18, 2014, 12:28:17 PMQuote from: bigtex on January 17, 2014, 03:54:20 PMLast year the DNR, LCB, and Parks bill had a committee hearing the same morning. The only opposition was WASPC and the Skamania County Sheriff. The Skamania County Sheriff is starting to get the reputation of being a radical in Olympia and legislators basically hammered him for turning these bills into a turf war. If you listed to his testimony, which turned into questioning you could hear him get frustrated and become upset.I actually had the opportunity of running into a law enforcement legislative liaison type person yesterday and this bill came up in the discussion. They said in their opinion WASPC is really starting to look bad in the eyes of the legislators. I guess many legislators are starting to see the only reason they are opposed to such bills is a simply turf war. Last year a Public Safety Committee Representative actually asked the Skamania County Sheriff that if a LCB, DNR, or Parks LEO was behind an obvious DUI driver in his county would he want them to have the authority to pull that person over, the sheriff said no and that he would want his deputies to do so. Supposedly that statement kind of sent a buzz through the legislature. An actual sheriff saying he didn't want a DUI driver to be pulled over simply because the officer worked for LCB, DNR, or Parks. Kind of the opposite of public safety eh?They also believe that this is the first time an agency has actually requested general authority since around 2002 when WDFW did it. And the unofficial word is that the LCB will submit this type of legislation every year until it does pass.Then you're going to have the majority of those cases tossed out of court, heck a deputy that does DUI every day has a hard time getting a conviction. I'm just against this super trooper idea of LE work. You need specialists who send cases to court and keeps abreast of all the changes and tweaks his/her cases to maximize conviction rates. I just don't see a LCB officer becoming proficient in bringing cases to the court and getting convictions on things that are outside their area of expertise.
What do you suggest to keep someone with no experience enforcing a law they know nothing about if not by agency?I know of no testing or grading, or other crediting system that enables an officer to enforce a law they have no clue about, worse if the LCB gets this authority then we could see stat driven enforcement to "validate" their reasoning for this SB 6130 and HB 2394. This would force officers with little to no experience enforcing a law in a field they know nothing about. DUI might not be a good example, how about chasing down a kid on an ATV?