ReportWire

Every police officer is a firefighter – and an EMT – in this South Bay City. Is that the “magic sauce” to being one of America’s safest cities?

Under a blazing bright November sun, Officer Andrew Tara re-arranged the gear for his patrol car on the asphalt outside of the department headquarters in Sunnyvale. Inside the car, evidence bags and a riot helmet is familiar to most police officers — not so much the other items he carries: a defibrillator and a full firefighting uniform with a respirator.

The gamut of equipment might seem unusual for a police officer, but Tara isn’t just a police officer, he’s also a firefighter and an EMT – and so is every other officer in Sunnyvale’s Public Safety Department.

Sunnyvale Department of Public Safety Officer Andrew Tara’s equipment includes gear for police, firefighting and emergency medical work. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

The model also can ease coordination between those assigned as fire and police. The department shares a single radio system and dispatch system.

This level of integration could be a significant boon to the department, said Brian Higgins, a lecturer at John Jay College of Criminal Justice who consults with public safety departments across the nation. Higgins previously oversaw fire, police and emergency management departments in Bergen County, New Jersey.

“Communications are always issues when it comes to police and fire,” said Higgins, who maintained that for coordinating across departments “there’s a real advantage to having this mixed model.”

Even so, Higgins, city officials and some in the department note that transitioning to the model would be difficult. And while Higgins doesn’t recommend the model for every department, he has a simple message regarding its success: “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

The Police Records Access Project contributed policing data and data analysis to this report.

Luis Melecio-Zambrano

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