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Chiefs' chief wants consistent policing policies statewide

Peter Thody

As police reform continues across the country, the Alaska Association of Police Chiefs is trying to write a statewide policy manual. The goal is to provide police departments, big and small, consistent guidelines for Use of Force, equipment and vehicles.

North Pole police chief and president of the Alaska Association of Police Chiefs Steve Dutra is leading development of the policy manual.

“This gives everybody a good model policy on how to conduct yourself and procedures that a small department can pull it right out of the box and put it on the shelf and use it.”

Dutra says he’s asking the legislature for a half-million dollars ($550,000) in seed money for the project. It would be to hire a contractor to produce it, then follow with training and outreach. The Association is also working with the Alaska Municipal League to raise the money. The Alaska State Troopers, the State Department of Public Safety and the Alaska Police Standard Council are, so far, not part of the project.

"It's a heavy lift for a small or medium-sized agency to do this on their own. Some villages have only one cop," Dutra said.

Dutra says, small Alaska towns don't have the resources to research updates on court decisions or weapons technology. But once written, the Alaska-specific Police Policy Manual could be adapted to fit variously-sized and outfitted departments, from villages to cities.

“You get this policy that's done. And then you just have to take that policy, go, okay, I don't have a helicopter. Throw that out. I don't have four-wheelers. Throw that out. I don't have tasers. Throw that out. Right? Or a body cam policy, whatever it might be; you  can take all that stuff out of there that you use, and then put forward a policy your department could now adopt as legally, defensible; capable of withstanding scrutiny, legal scrutiny.”

North Pole Police Chief Steve Dutra explains why the Alaska Association of Police Chiefs is pursuing a manual of consistent policing policies across the state, during a teleconference last week.
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KUAC
North Pole Police Chief Steve Dutra explains why the Alaska Association of Police Chiefs is pursuing a manual of consistent policing policies across the state, during a teleconference last week.

Dutra says legal and insurance liability are driving a lot of the need for consistency, but stresses that police departments are also responding to public demand for transparency.

“We’re being upfront. Here's our policies. We'll publish 'em online, we'll show you what we do, we have, we do Use of Force online, so it's transparent. You know, there's lots of things like that that help build better relationships between the police and the community.”

As president of the chiefs’ association, he wants published policies and updated training to become the norm, not the exception.

“We need to be ahead of this, not behind it.”

Then Dutra wants police departments to seek accreditation from a national reviewer. Right now, only the Kodiak Police Department and the Anchorage Airport Police and Fire Department are accredited. He is working on it for his own force in North Pole.

"If we develop policies that are vetted, that are sound, and people know that North Pole PD has adopted these policies and we get accredited, it makes us look good. Right?"

The conversation with Dutra last week about writing and funding the policy manual was before the City of Memphis, Tennessee, on Friday released video footage of the brutal police beating that killed Tyre Nichols. So we spoke with Chief Dutra again this week.

 “And the purpose of our project is to stop these things from happening," Dutra said.

He emphasizes that what happened in Memphis “was not policing.” He says it underscores the need for strict conduct guidelines.

"If it comes to fruition  -- the policy manual and accreditation come hand in hand -- you'll see the professional level of departments rise. That's, that's an important message," Dutra said.

Dutra wants to send that message, because he’s recruiting for two open positions on the North Pole Police Department, and he knows many other agencies in Alaska are also under-staffed.

“And, and then the professionalism rises in the departments, then you no longer have … thugs… working the streets and unsupervised positions.”

Currently, Dutra is looking for support in the legislature. He will meet with Democratic Senator Elvi Gray-Jackson, who authored several police reform bills in 32nd legislature.

Robyne began her career in public media news at KUAC, coiling cables in the TV studio and loading reel-to-reel tape machines for the radio station.