HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021 09-18 Retired Chief Scott Nadeau PIONEER PRESSLOCAL
Across Minnesota, police chiefs are
opting for early retirement
Fatigue, anti -police sentiment cited in unprecedented exodus.
By Kim Hyatt and Shannon Prather, Star Tribune SEPTEMBER 18, 2021 — 6:35PM
As Bloomington police chief, Jeff Potts checked his phone 15 times every hour, every day.
He rarely slept more than four hours a night. He missed his stepson's hockey games. He
never took a vacation. And when he was with family, he was worrying about an incident
that would thrust his department into the spotlight.
"You worry, 'Is that going to happen in my city tonight?' And if it does, everybody knows
how chaotic and stressful that's going to be," Potts said. "You just couldn't get away from
the constant concern and fear or worry."
So Potts retired early at age 52, leaving in January after three decades with the
department, including 12 as chief. And he's not alone.
At least 32 police chiefs in Minnesota have retired this year — more than half of which
were in the metro area — and another dozen retired in 2020. Public safety officials say
this unprecedented number of departures is creating a wave of new leadership at
departments still grappling with the COVID-19 pandemic and policing in a post -George
Floyd world.
Communities across the country are seeing a similar exodus. The nonprofit Police
Executive Research Forum surveyed nearly 200 police agencies this summer and found a
45% increase in the retirement rate (https://www.policeforum.or index.php2
Qption=com content&view=article&id=972:workforcesurveyjune2021&catid=20:site-
contentInationwide.
In interviews, some former Minnesota chiefs cited fatigue and anti -police sentiment as
part of their rationale for leaving.
"They're stressed out, in some cases, perhaps slightly burned out," said Potts, who is now
executive director of the Minnesota Chiefs of Police Association. "And when they are
afforded the opportunity to retire — perhaps even a little bit earlier than they otherwise
would have — they're just choosing to do that, because I believe it's probably one of the
most difficult jobs to do in this country today."
Potts' predecessor, Andy Skoogman, spokesman for the chiefs association and the
Hennepin County Sheriffs Office, said the state experienced a "small wave" of
retirements in 2014 due to pension changes that increased the financial penalty for early_
retirement (https://www.startribune.com/with-pension-rule-change-scores-of-police-
officers-in-state-will-retire/261396001/)_, but this wave is bigger and less predictable.
Former Bloomington Police Chief Jeff Potts,
who is now the executive director of the
Minnesota Police Chief Association, is one of
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Departments in the metro that have lost a chief this year include Eden Prairie, Edina,
Golden Valley, Inver Grove Heights, Maplewood, New Hope, North St. Paul, Oak Park
Heights, Oakdale, Plymouth, South Lake Minnetonka, Spring Lake Park, Stillwater and
Wayzata.
"It is unusually high," Skoogman said. "And in some communities, there should be some
concerns to ensure whoever is coming next is as best prepared as he or she can possibly
be.,.
But that preparation may be difficult, considering the stress and scrutiny chiefs are
under, Skoogman said. To boot, the profession is in the midst of a 25-year low of new
officers entering the field. With leaders leaving and not enough new people coming in,
the public safety system is at risk of eroding, he said.
A stressful job
Former Roseville Police Chief Rick Mathwig retired in 2020 at age 55 after serving as the
suburb's top cop for 11 years. But in casual exchanges with hairdressers and clerks, he'd
stopped saying what he did for a living years before.
"I stopped telling them I was police officer five or six years ago," he said. "It was another
conversation you wanted to avoid."
Under Mathwig's leadership, the department began releasing annual reports of officer
use of force and traffic stops and launched efforts to improve officer diversity. He said
city leaders supported and understood the work, but law enforcement critics —
including some in other levels of government — were unrelenting.
"That last year including the pandemic was very tiring on my soul and my body. It was
time to move on and let somebody else occupy that chair," said Mathwig, who has
moved to a full-time office job outside the department.
Former Maplewood Police Chief Scott Nadeau retired in June at age 55, after weighing
factors including qualifying for full pension, added stress around the pandemic and a
changing perception of police.
"It's a stressful job in the best of environments. In the post -George Floyd environment, in
the pandemic environment, it became much more stressful," said Nadeau, who was also
police chief in Columbia Heights. "There are a lot of things going on societally. You now
have new issues. You have recruiting and retention. You have staff morale. I've been a
chief for 14 years — the last two years were by far some of the most stressful."
The barrage of negative media coverage around policing drowned out good work
happening in police departments, Nadeau said, including adding social workers,
diversifying the officer pool and collaborating with community groups.
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While he felt support from city leaders and many in the community, "the media and
social media continue to be filled with the bad news and the things that aren't working.
It was frustrating. There was a lack of balance," he said.
Nadeau has temporarily returned to law enforcement as the interim Golden Valley
police chief. But suburbs are often filling chief positions internally. In Bloomington,
Potts' replacement, Mike Hartley, said he's only leading the department until he retires
in March. Former Brooklyn Center chief Tim Gannon, who resigned after the fatal
shooting of Daunte Wright in April, was replaced by 19-year department veteran Tony
Gruenig, who is interim chief as the city implements a package of public safety reforms,
f https://www.startribune.com/brooLdyn-center-to-appoint-project-manager-to-help=
with-police-reform/600092930/)
Michelle Gross, founder of Communities United Against Police Brutality, said she can't
speak to any particular retirement but pushed back on the notion that reform efforts are
anti -police.
"I don't feel like there is an anti -law enforcement sentiment. I feel like people are crying
out to reform a system that does harm to them," Gross said. "If you are a person
standing in the way of change, bye. Maybe this is clearing the deck for some people who
will bring in a new culture and more receptive attitude."
Newly hired chiefs say they take the helm fully aware of the changing realities of the job.
Erika Scheider was named Roseville's chief last year. She's been with the 55-officer
department since 1997, working her way up from patrol officer to detective to deputy
chief.
"The east metro is my home. I thought it was worth the challenges the position brings,"
she said.
Scheider said she's committed to the transparency, increased diversity and community
outreach already underway, and is accelerating those efforts, including by creating a
multicultural advisory committee. The 47-year-old mother of three said she's also
concerned about the health and well-being of officers, and now requires them to speak
with a mental health professional annually.
'Benefits outweigh the risk'
Phil Baebenroth, 36, was sworn in as North St. Paul police chief this month, replacing
Tom Lauth, who retired after 32 years with the department. Baebenroth said he had
long, deep conversations with loved ones about taking a chief job amid what he
described as a "hatefulness" of police in some pockets of society.
Baebenroth, a father of four, said he knows if there's a critical incident such as an officer -
involved shooting, he's likely to lose his job along with officers involved. But he said he
still believes in the profession and officers' ability to contribute to the community.
"The benefits outweigh the risk," he said.
Baebenroth said he is focused on officer wellness and making sure they have the time to
be out talking to neighbors, shooting hoops with teens and getting to know their
community. He said he and other chiefs are resisting efforts to reduce the profession to
officers who simply rush from one violent emergency call to the next.
"That is a nightmare if you are just going from gun call to gun call," he said. "It makes it
very difficult to have those healthy community relationships."
The chiefs who have left describe better work -life balance with more time and attention
for families and hobbies.
Potts said he's going on his first vacation — a wine tour in Napa, Calif. — and he's been
getting a full night's sleep on top of finding time for woodworking. Mathwig said he has
been working on home renovations and reading more.
"I still have more life in me," he said. "I just wanted to get out of that profession."