"We needed to keep people on the street and saw the cuts to training as a bridge to better times," Jordan says.
Daytona Beach (Fla.) Police Chief Michael Chitwood says his department's entire $200,000 training budget was wiped out this year because of municipal service reductions.
The chief says he is working with local universities that have volunteered to help restore the programs, including instruction on the proper use of stun guns and how to defuse potentially dangerous confrontations with the mentally ill.
The chief says city leaders were aware of the risk of lawsuits related to potential officer mistakes and misconduct but that the city decided to "pay on the back-end."
"The private sector was appalled when they found out about this," Chitwood says.
In Philadelphia, Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey says he refuses to curtail training because there is too much at stake.
"When you cut back on training, officers are sued and fired. I learned a hard lesson from that," Ramsey says, referring to incidents during his previous stint as chief in Washington, D.C. "We're doing everything we can to avoid that."
In some cases, the fallout may not be felt right away, but analysts say the scope of the cuts could soon create serious problems.
"When you pull away the support beams of a building, it doesn't fall down immediately," says Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum. "But eventually, it's going to have an impact."
CUTBACKS: Police curtail calls for some crimes |