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The Fulton
County Sheriff's Office (FCSO) was accredited by the Commission on Accreditation
for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc. (CALEA) on March 25, 2000, and
is the largest law enforcement agency in the state of Georgia to achieve
accredited status.
The Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc., is a
nonprofit organization, formed in 1979 by the International Association of Chiefs of
Police, the National Sheriff's Association, the National Organization of Black Law
Enforcement Executives and the Police Executive Research Forum. After several years of
national research, these professional organizations developed the Standards for Law
Enforcement Agencies. The commission's principal publication contains more than 900
standards, prepared by the four founding law enforcement executive membership associations. The complete standards were presented to the commission,
which reviewed each standard at quarterly meetings held in many parts of the country from
late 1979 to early 1983. Following a field review of the standards in several hundred law
enforcement agencies, the commission adopted the standards in April 1983. In April
1994, the commission published a third edition which condensed the number of standards to
436. The current standards edition is the fourth edition, which has 439
standards and was adopted in January, 1999. These law enforcement standards were designed to:
increase law enforcement agency
abilities to prevent and control crime;
increase agency effectiveness and
efficiency in the delivery of law enforcement services;
increase cooperation and
coordination with other law enforcement agencies and with other agencies of the criminal
justice system; and
increase citizen and employee
confidence in the goals, objectives, policies and practices of the agency.
In addition, the commission was formed to develop a process that provides state and
local law enforcement agencies an opportunity to demonstrate voluntarily that they meet an
established set of law enforcement standards.
Benefits of Law Enforcement Accreditation
- Accreditation demonstrates the commitment of the agency to professionalism in terms of
adherence to a body of standards.
- Accreditation assures the community that its law enforcement agency is committed to
high quality service and that its policies and procedures are effective and responsive on
the one hand, and fair and equitable on the other.
- Accreditation enhances community understanding of the law enforcement agency's role as
well as its goals and objectives.
- Accreditation commits the agency to a broad range of programs of direct benefit to the
public as well as to programs to cope with man-made or natural disasters.
- Accreditation
promotes community cooperation and understanding.
- Accreditation requires an in-depth review of every aspect of an agency's organization,
management, operations and administration including:
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establishment of agency goals and
objectives with provision for periodic updating;
re-evaluation of whether agency
resources are being used in accordance with agency goals, objectives and mission;
re-evaluation of agency policies
and procedures especially as documented in the agency's written directives system; and
correction of deficiencies before
they become public problems.
- The accreditation standards provide norms against which agency performance can be
measured and monitored over time.
- Accreditation provides the agency with a continuing flow of commission-distributed
information about exemplary policies, procedures and projects.
- Accreditation provides the agency an opportunity to participate in the development of
new or revised standards.
- Accreditation provides recognition that the agency's managerial and operational
policies and procedures are in accord with a body of professional standards.
- Accreditation assures that agency policies and procedures are in written form and
available to all agency personnel.
- Accreditation assures personnel that every aspect of the agency's personnel system is
in accordance with professional standards, and that it is both fair and equitable.
- Accreditation enhances the morale of the agency by increasing the confidence of
employees in the effectiveness and efficiency of their own agency.
- Accreditation promotes relationships with other neighboring law enforcement agencies,
as well as prosecutors, courts, correctional agencies, and state and local government
officials.
- Accreditation provides objective measures to justify decisions related to budget
requests and personnel policies.
- Accreditation reduces the likelihood of vicarious liability suits against the agency.
For more information, write or call:
The
Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc.
10306 Eaton Place
Suite
320
Fairfax, VA 22030-2201
(800) 368-3757
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Fulton County Sheriff's Office 2007. All rights
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