By Rod Hansen
Staff Writer
Despite
a rising number of criminal incidents in Goffstown, Police Chief
Michael French has requested no new personnel and only a 1 percent
increase in his budget for next year.
From drunk driving to domestic violence, computer crime to
juvenile offenses, Goffstown has seen statistics on criminal activity
increase substantially over the past year, he said.
French presented selectmen and budget committee members with
his budget proposal during the selectmen’s meeting of Monday, Sept. 25.
This year’s budget for police operations totals $3,064,244.
French spoke of no major projects for the coming year that would affect
his budget requests.
“Our goal is to maintain the level of service the people have come to expect from us,” French said.
The department consists of 42 full-time employees, including 30 sworn officers and 26 part-time employees, French said.
He cited a number of grim statistics facing the police force
this year, including nearly 100 more assault cases, an increase in the
severity of juvenile offenses and arrests, more burglaries, criminal
mischief and arrests for driving while intoxicated.
“The good news, if there is any good news in these graphs, is
that motor vehicle crashes are down, and accidents resulting in
personal injury are down,” French said. He attributed that decrease to
officers’ strict enforcement of speed limits through town.
French said there have been some salary increases to sworn and
non-sworn officers, plus rising overtime costs. Some events demanding
overtime included investigations, court appearances, holiday pay and
police service at town events.
French said there was a substantial amount of overtime accrued
during the May floods, but he said the department attempted to control
expenses by using salaried personnel as often as possible.
For example, French said he recalled attorney Kerry Steckowych
manning a traffic post at 2 a.m. one Sunday during the height of the
emergency.
Plans for station improvements this year include $4,000 for
construction of a gated impound lot outside the station. That lot would
measure 20-by-25 feet on an area of police department property that is
now gravel, French said. The vehicles would be covered by tarps, as
constructing an indoor garage for the vehicles would have been cost
prohibitive, he said.
The budget also includes a $65,000 line item for fuel expenses,
calculated at $2.25 per gallon for a fleet traveling 300,000 miles per
year.
Capital expenditures for the department includes $119,000 for
police vehicles, comprising three used Ford Crown Victorias to be used
as police cruisers and one Chevy Blazer for use as an animal control
vehicle.
The Capital Improvements Program also lists $44,544 for
improvements to police communications software. The communications
department provides dispatch services for Goffstown, New Boston and
Weare, and is currently running software approximately seven years old,
French said.
Before presenting his budget overview, French presented
selectmen with an award from Volunteer New Hampshire recognizing the
efforts of the Community Emergency Response Team during the May floods.