Train More? Train Less?

A few years ago I was spending most of my time traveling around visiting police agencies on behalf of insurance pools. For those of you who might not know, because it can be so difficult and expensive for governmental entities to get insurance, many of them band together in "pools" and buy insurance for themselves - sort of a wholesale arrangement.

Anyway, I spent a considerable amount of time visiting clients. In fact, I visited several hundred police and sheriff's departments across several states. The idea was to look at what they were doing and make recommendations on ways they could reduce officer injuries and avoid lawsuits. We weren't necessarily the smartest kids on the block, but we were able to get a sense of what was happening in the profession, and share it with our other clients - sort of a clearinghouse of common practices.

Of course, we spent a lot of time looking at their training efforts. Because we knew that the same things that got them hurt also got them sued, we tended to look at use of force and vehicle operations, although we also considered other aspects of their operations.

We found ourselves making recommendations regarding the types of training they were doing, as well as how often they did it. Since the law enforcement profession doesn't really have any hard and fast standards for training frequency, we looked to the police community in general, and to what we saw as common practices. We then told chiefs and sheriffs that they should work to meet the typical standards that many agencies had in place.

Sounds reasonable, doesn't it? Here's the problem - how were we supposed to know that what everyone else was doing was the right thing?

The "Norm"

Consider this: commonly held belief in law enforcement is that we should train and recertify annually with our various use-of-force tools and techniques. In fact, although some departments do additional training when they can, that standard is still the expectation for training in many parts of the country.

Minimum standard for firearms qualification? Annually.
Recertify in defensive tactics? Annually.
Legal update training? Annually.
Retrain with OC or our ECD? Annually.

The question is... Why?

What makes "once a year" the magic number? Why not more often? Or once every two years?

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