Thinking of applying...
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  1. #1
    Guest

    Thinking of applying...

    Evening, folks. I am considering leaving my agency and heading up North. I am attracted to the small town feel of Perry and I enjoy the area. I have a few questions first if I may.

    How is morale?
    I know there are no current take-homes, but is it a future possibility?
    How long is the hiring process?
    Can testing be expedited for an out of area applicant?
    How's the opportunity for OT/OD work?
    Opportunity to a specialized unit?
    and lastly, any good rental housing or apartments in the area?

    Thanks, and you all stay safe.

  2. #2
    Guest

    Re: Thinking of applying...

    Quote Originally Posted by Guest
    Evening, folks. I am considering leaving my agency and heading up North. I am attracted to the small town feel of Perry and I enjoy the area. I have a few questions first if I may.

    How is morale?
    I know there are no current take-homes, but is it a future possibility?
    How long is the hiring process?
    Can testing be expedited for an out of area applicant?
    How's the opportunity for OT/OD work?
    Opportunity to a specialized unit?
    and lastly, any good rental housing or apartments in the area?

    Thanks, and you all stay safe.
    Thank you for your interest,
    Morale is good, we make almost as much as a starting trooper but we do real police work.
    We do not have take home cars, not gonna happen.
    Hiring process is lengthy for out of towner's.
    Testing yes.
    OT and OD is negative unless you want to work a high school football game.
    Specialized unit, slim chance this ain't LAPD.
    Try Tidewater Apartments, they give officer discounts.

    and

    Don't expect many replies on this board from Perry PD, they have all been told to stay away from here or else! Same with the Taylor SO site. Small town leaders rule with a strong hand. No union, scared of collective bargaining and tough to get hired from the outside. Seems they try to shield their work force from the outside world. Like a mushroom!

  3. #3
    Guest

    Re: Thinking of applying...

    Quote Originally Posted by Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Guest
    Evening, folks. I am considering leaving my agency and heading up North. I am attracted to the small town feel of Perry and I enjoy the area. I have a few questions first if I may.

    How is morale?
    I know there are no current take-homes, but is it a future possibility?
    How long is the hiring process?
    Can testing be expedited for an out of area applicant?
    How's the opportunity for OT/OD work?
    Opportunity to a specialized unit?
    and lastly, any good rental housing or apartments in the area?

    Thanks, and you all stay safe.
    Thank you for your interest,
    Morale is good, we make almost as much as a starting trooper but we do real police work.
    We do not have take home cars, not gonna happen.
    Hiring process is lengthy for out of towner's.
    Testing yes.
    OT and OD is negative unless you want to work a high school football game.
    Specialized unit, slim chance this ain't LAPD.
    Try Tidewater Apartments, they give officer discounts.

    and

    Don't expect many replies on this board from Perry PD, they have all been told to stay away from here or else! Same with the Taylor SO site. Small town leaders rule with a strong hand. No union, scared of collective bargaining and tough to get hired from the outside. Seems they try to shield their work force from the outside world. Like a mushroom!
    Don't try Tidewater Apts. Stay away from Tidewater and pretty much most of the Apartments in town. There are some real good rental properties in town. It seems to vary from week to week from the listings in the News Paper. Some weeks there isn't anything good, other weeks there are quite a few good ones to select from.

    Like the above poster stated, the OT and OD pretty much consists of the High School football games. Some times there is some other OT available, but not very often.

    Perry just started a K-9 unit with 2 Officers and Dogs. Other than that, there are the Investigators, and 1 SRO. We also have the CIty/County Joint Drug Task Force. This consists of 1 "investigator" from each agency.

    Pretty much the only way to move up from patrol is to wait for someone to quit or retire. There is the possibility of some retirements in the next few years. At least one can hope.

    Things are better with the current Chief than the old one. Could be even better, but we got what we got. Most of the supervisors are good people. The one jumped in rank super fast leaves a lot to be desired, but the rest are good to go.

    Like the other poster said, don't expect too many posts. Most don't have the intestinal fortitude to post on here. I for one believe in telling it like it is.

  4. #4
    Guest

    Re: Thinking of applying...

    Always bashing the Captain. Ha

    At least the Captain at the PD has a set of brass ones, has fought a few battles for us and won them, and he is the one that started the K9 unit, got us new weapons and patrol rifles. Started the crash billing program to bring in revenue. He is trying to get a new radio system for us, he will talk to people and you can approach him, he does not think he is better than everyone else.

    You want a really bad supervisor, then go to work for the Sheriff's Office. The supreme Captain over there is a real piece of work. He will steal your cases and claim them for himself. Then plaster his name all over the TV and newspapers.

    Leave the PD Captain alone and focus on the bad guy in town, the S.O. Captain is the problem

  5. #5
    Guest

    Re: Thinking of applying...

    Quote Originally Posted by Guest
    Always bashing the Captain. Ha

    At least the Captain at the PD has a set of brass ones, has fought a few battles for us and won them, and he is the one that started the K9 unit, got us new weapons and patrol rifles. Started the crash billing program to bring in revenue. He is trying to get a new radio system for us, he will talk to people and you can approach him, he does not think he is better than everyone else.

    You want a really bad supervisor, then go to work for the Sheriff's Office. The supreme Captain over there is a real piece of work. He will steal your cases and claim them for himself. Then plaster his name all over the TV and newspapers.

    Leave the PD Captain alone and focus on the bad guy in town, the S.O. Captain is the problem
    Are you kidding me, a new radio system!

    Have you any idea how much that would cost! Sure you can use the inner-op money from traffic fines to help fund it but to qualify, at least two agencies must participate in the project. That brings the SO in to the picture. If your looking at 800 or now 700 Mhz system, you've gone from a single site system for the city to a four or five site system to sufficiently cover our county with 95% portable coverage. The state of Florida 800 system currently has 4 sites in Taylor County and ask the troopers how their radios work! They are crap! In an effort to justify this project, the county and city would then add all their agencies to the system leading the tax payers to believe this will give better communications between local and state agencies during emergencies. All local agencies are currently on the same band, they can talk to each other by changing channels. Madison, Dixie and Lafayette are currently on the same band and programmed in our radios. A new system would put us on an island. The only stepchild is FHP and they would gladly trade for what we have now.

    I can't remember a time when I called for a dispatcher and was told to standby because of channel crowding. Our current system is sufficient for the traffic load. Before jumping in deep, an engineering study will clearly show the lack of activity to justify such a need. The only reason these communication companies knock on our door is to sell equipment. Right now their song and dance is about the FCC mandate that all users between 30-450 Mhz must move to a narrowband P25 system by 2013. Hey as long as you gotta buy new stuff why not upgrade to 700/800 mhz. I am a user but also a taxpayer. Don't be sucked into the black hole of these sales tactics that will cost us millions in tax dollars. Yes, move to narrowband as mandated by law but keep the current frequencies and let a local vendor continue to maintain and support our equipment.

    Now, I'm off my soapbox.
    Carry on!

  6. #6
    Guest

    Re: Thinking of applying...

    sounds like a local vendor talking to me.

    maybe a little better service and less patching crap built with crap would make everyone want to keep the business local.

    the equipment companies did not come to the bosses and tell them it was time to buy new, the bosses went to the companies and said we have to change, then asked what the options were.

    maybe if the "local vendors/repairmen" would have informed the bosses that the mandate was coming in 2004 when is was passed, then maybe a little more local would be an option, but a half a$$ job as usual is what they got.

    just patch up the tin cans and string and do business as usual or try to advance into the future.

    I do not know what happened at the meeting with the city and county a couple of weeks ago, but at least there are discussions about the upcoming radio change.

    I do know that it is scary as hell to key up your radio when you need help and you can't even talk to anyone in Perry when standing in Perry. When you have to use the radios every day then you can have an opinion, but when your sole interest in financial then you opinion is not worth 2 cents. Safety should be first, not your need to sell radios to the people that need them.

  7. #7
    Guest

    Re: Thinking of applying...

    Quote Originally Posted by Guest
    Always bashing the Captain. Ha

    At least the Captain at the PD has a set of brass ones, has fought a few battles for us and won them, and he is the one that started the K9 unit, got us new weapons and patrol rifles. Started the crash billing program to bring in revenue. He is trying to get a new radio system for us, he will talk to people and you can approach him, he does not think he is better than everyone else.

    You want a really bad supervisor, then go to work for the Sheriff's Office. The supreme Captain over there is a real piece of work. He will steal your cases and claim them for himself. Then plaster his name all over the TV and newspapers.

    Leave the PD Captain alone and focus on the bad guy in town, the S.O. Captain is the problem
    Thanks for the reply JC.

  8. #8
    Guest

    Re: Thinking of applying...

    Quote Originally Posted by Guest
    sounds like a local vendor talking to me.

    maybe a little better service and less patching crap built with crap would make everyone want to keep the business local.

    the equipment companies did not come to the bosses and tell them it was time to buy new, the bosses went to the companies and said we have to change, then asked what the options were.

    maybe if the "local vendors/repairmen" would have informed the bosses that the mandate was coming in 2004 when is was passed, then maybe a little more local would be an option, but a half a$$ job as usual is what they got.

    just patch up the tin cans and string and do business as usual or try to advance into the future.

    I do not know what happened at the meeting with the city and county a couple of weeks ago, but at least there are discussions about the upcoming radio change.

    I do know that it is scary as hell to key up your radio when you need help and you can't even talk to anyone in Perry when standing in Perry. When you have to use the radios every day then you can have an opinion, but when your sole interest in financial then you opinion is not worth 2 cents. Safety should be first, not your need to sell radios to the people that need them.


    A trunked system for a county with so few users and fewer dollars is going to drain the budget. The elected officials will be bombarded with opposition to such an unnecessary expense. It will take an independent study from a neutral party to evaluate the needs of the local agencies and make a recommendation to the spending boards not a meeting with a vendor who will stop at nothing to sell more equipment.

    Your complaint of dead spots with portable radios is a know fact for the current systems but has never be properly addressed. No one wants to spend the money. The main transmitter being located at Boyd is a long haul for a portable radio in Perry especially from inside a building. Two fixes come to mind. First, equip all mobile radios with mobile repeaters that takes the signal from the portable and retransmits through the mobile. This is good for your patrol units but does not solve other issues with court bailiffs, office staff and investigators who may not use mobile radios. Your deputies would see the greatest return on this upgrade. Second, install remote voting receivers around the city and county that receive the transmissions, determine which receiver is hearing the loudest signal and (vote) send it to the Boyd site by phone line or microwave to be transmitted back out. Voting receivers could also be placed at Keaton Beach, Salem and Steinhatchee to work with the south repeater in Hines. Madison County uses these in their system which was upgraded by Motorola a few years back. This would be the most cost effective fix for your problem. You still have the issue with upgrading to narrowband equipment.

    Here's a cost saving tip from a motorola web site, "Lake County Florida has migrated from a single-site VHF system; to a mixed-mode ASTRO® 25 VHF 6 site simulcast
    system; and recently contracted with Motorola for an 18-site 12 channel, ASTRO 25 system with Integrated Voice and Data (IV&D), microwave, and over-the-air programming. Although Lake County would soon have a new radio system, it would still be surrounded by legacy 800MHz Motorola systems."

    Did you see VHF? that means they are taking their P25 narrowband VHF system out of service, which is less than 6 years old, and going 800 Mhz. They didn't mention price for the new one but theres a deal in here somewhere for the city or county to pick up hundreds of radios and repeaters for pennies on the dollar and still use VHF frequencies. Of course, this is not a plug and play system like you have now. This is the top of the line digital VHF from Motorola. You'll have to pay them to set it up. Maybe your local vendor can be trained on this stuff and keep it running.

    Baker and Levy counties have joined the state of Florida SLERS 800 system and is paying a monthly fee to use it. Police, Fire and EMS use it. Ask them for a cost and if they are pleased with the system performance. I can tell you that the Highway Patrol is using the system and can hardly use their portable radios in the rural counties in north Florida. Depending on what kinda deal the county or city swings with Macom, they normally charge $30 a month per radio. The agency has to buy the equipment first and only encrypted models are allowed on the state system. Price tag for those, between 3800 and 4500 each depending on the features and options. The optional maintenance agreement from Macom to keep them repaired is $104 each per year. Sorry but your local vendor cannot touch these. Upside, full blown security and no more scanner eavesdropping. Boy, that would be great! You'll still have dead spots with this system but you could negotiate with macom to turn over the use 800 frequencies pool slotted for Taylor County and the City of Perry to add sites for more coverage. The state system has ran out of 800 frequencies that will allow them to build it larger thats why they are moving it to a 800/700 dual band system in the future.

    Again, problems with 800 megs will be dead spots that cannot be covered without adding tower sites and big money for each. The main reason for agencies going 800/700 trunked is channel overloading and channel management. That is not the case for your local agencies. If the city wants to put up a single site 4 channel trunked system for all city agencies to share, you will have little problem and the cost will be bearable. If the county jumps into the mix, it will never work without breaking the bank.

    Encourage your leaders to look at all the options and have an independent study before buying more string an tin cans.

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