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Collin County sheriff doesn't want raises based on performance evaluations

Collin County Courthouse
Azul Sordo
/
四虎影院
The Collin County courthouse.

Collin County could change how it pays sheriff's office employees, depending on how budget talks go.

Right now, most Collin County employees get raises based on a pay-for-performance system. But Sheriff Jim Skinner said that system doesn鈥檛 work for his office, so he and the commissioner鈥檚 court are talking about what would work best as the county plans out its budget for the upcoming fiscal year that starts Oct. 1.

The pay-for-performance model uses employee evaluations to determine how much of a raise the employee gets. Each employee is rated on a scale from one to three. A higher rating means a bigger salary increase.

Collin County Judge Chris Hill said at a recent commissioners鈥 court meeting that the pay-for-performance system encourages growth.

鈥淲e want to keep those strong performers, and we want to provide incentives for others to improve their performance,鈥 Hill said.

Other counties in Texas don鈥檛 use a pay-for-performance model to compensate law enforcement. Collin County Jim Skinner said those counties use a 鈥渟tep model,鈥 which gives every law enforcement officer on the same level the same raise each year. He鈥檚 effectively achieved the same result by giving all of his staff a "two" rating in the pay-for-performance system.

Skinner said there鈥檚 a reason that other counties don鈥檛 use the pay-for-performance model for law enforcement. He said using money as an incentive isn鈥檛 a good idea.

鈥淭hat's great if you're making widgets or you're selling shoes or software or cars or whatever the case may be,鈥 Skinner said. 鈥淏ut it's certainly not a good idea for law enforcement.鈥

A step program means law enforcement officers can assume they鈥檒l get a set raise each year as long as it鈥檚 planned for in the budget. That reduces the incentive for competition among officers. Skinner said that isn鈥檛 constructive in a profession that requires a lot of teamwork.

Skinner also said it keeps officers focused on public service. Focusing on a performance standard to get a higher raise can create a mercenary environment, he said, something Skinner doesn鈥檛 want to encourage.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to pay more money to the guy who writes more tickets than everybody else or takes more people to jail than everybody else,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 mean, there's much more to law enforcement than that.鈥

Skinner鈥檚 use of the rating system to keep salary increases the same for all of his employees doesn鈥檛 impact the budget 鈥 he鈥檚 distributing the money he gets from the county for raises evenly rather than giving more money to certain employees.

Whether or not the court will change how Collin County pays law enforcement is something Skinner and the court are still discussing. The sheriff said so far, things look promising.

鈥淚'm very, very optimistic that we'll get something worked out that works perfectly,鈥 Skinner said.

Got a tip? Email Caroline Love at clove@kera.org.

Caroline Love is a  corps member for 四虎影院.

四虎影院 is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider . Thank you.

Caroline Love is the Collin County government accountability reporter for 四虎影院 and a former Report for America corps member.

Previously, Caroline covered daily news at Houston Public Media. She has a master's degree from Northwestern University with an emphasis on investigative social justice journalism. During grad school, she reported three feature stories for 四虎影院. She also has a bachelor's degree in journalism from Texas Christian University and interned with 四虎影院's Think in 2019.