When Expanding Police Training Isn’t the Same as Expanding Wisdom
Recently, the province of British Columbia approved new satellite police training academies in Vancouver and Victoria, overseen by the Justice Institute of British Columbia. The intention is to increase the number of officers being trained each year to address staffing shortages across police departments.
On the surface, this might sound like a practical solution. Communities want safety. Cities want adequate staffing. Governments want faster training pipelines.
But many citizens have very real concerns — and those concerns deserve serious discussion.
Because the issue isn’t simply how many officers we produce.
The real question is: what kind of officers are we producing, and are they prepared for the world they are entering?
Six Months of Training for Society’s Hardest Problems
In British Columbia, basic police academy training lasts roughly six months. Afterward, recruits complete field training under senior officers before working independently.
Compare that with other professions expected to care for people during crises:
- Nurses train for approximately four years.
- Teachers often complete four to six years of education.
- Doctors train for seven to ten years or more.
Yet police officers are often the first responders to society’s most complicated human crises.
They are called to:
- mental health emergencies
- domestic disputes
- addiction and overdose situations
- homelessness outreach
- family breakdowns
- trauma and violence
- public disorder
- community conflict
These situations require far more than tactical training.
They require emotional intelligence, psychological understanding, life experience, and wisdom.
No classroom can teach wisdom in six months.
The Problem With “Learning From the Old Guard”
After the academy, new recruits typically learn by shadowing experienced officers.
In theory, this mentorship model should help young officers learn practical skills.
But in reality, it can sometimes reinforce the very problems communities are worried about.
If previous generations of policing included:
- outdated attitudes toward mental health
- bias toward certain communities
- aggressive enforcement styles
- adversarial relationships with citizens
Then those attitudes can be quietly passed down.
Training becomes less about modern knowledge and more about absorbing the culture of the department.
And culture, once entrenched, is very difficult to change.
Many recruits enter policing wanting to help people. But when the dominant culture emphasizes authority, hierarchy, and “us versus them” thinking, idealism can erode quickly.
A Military Structure in a Civilian Society
Police forces often operate with a strict command hierarchy similar to the military.
Orders flow downward.
Questioning superiors can be discouraged.
For new recruits, this structure can make it extremely difficult to challenge problematic behavior or outdated thinking.
If a young officer sees something wrong, the pressure to conform can be enormous.
Career advancement, peer acceptance, and workplace safety may all depend on staying silent.
This environment can unintentionally protect bad habits rather than reform them.
Policing Has Become the Catch-All for Social Failures
Over the last several decades, many social services have been reduced or stretched thin.
Mental health services are overwhelmed.
Affordable housing is scarce.
Addiction treatment is limited.
Community supports have weakened.
When people fall through these cracks, who is called?
The police.
Officers are now expected to respond to problems that historically would have been handled by:
- mental health professionals
- social workers
- community mediators
- addiction specialists
Police are often placed in situations where they are the least appropriate tool for the problem, yet they are the only available response.
This creates stress for everyone involved.
Citizens feel misunderstood.
Officers feel overwhelmed.
And tragedies can occur when complex human crises are approached as enforcement problems rather than care situations.
Trust Cannot Be Built Through Force
Public trust in policing depends on more than patrol cars and enforcement.
It depends on whether communities believe officers understand them.
People want officers who have:
- empathy
- cultural awareness
- patience
- life experience
- strong ethical judgment
Communities also want accountability when mistakes occur.
When misconduct scandals appear — whether involving excessive force, harassment, or discrimination — public trust erodes quickly.
And rebuilding that trust takes far longer than six months.
Expanding Training Capacity Isn’t the Same as Improving Training Quality
Creating new academies may increase the number of officers graduating each year.
But quantity is not the same as quality.
A better conversation might include questions like:
- Should police training be longer?
- Should more time be devoted to psychology and conflict resolution?
- Should officers train alongside social workers and health professionals?
- Should departments recruit candidates with broader life experience?
- Should crisis response teams include non-police specialists?
These questions are not anti-police.
They are pro-community.
Because everyone benefits when first responders are well prepared for the realities they face.
Communities Deserve Thoughtful Solutions
Safety is important.
But safety comes from thoughtful systems, not rushed ones.
Citizens, officers, and vulnerable people alike all deserve a system that prioritizes:
- wisdom over speed
- understanding over force
- prevention over reaction
Training more officers may be necessary.
But training better officers — with deeper education, broader perspectives, and stronger support systems — may be even more important.
The real goal should not simply be filling uniforms.
The goal should be building a society where the people entrusted with authority truly understand the communities they serve.
Because when the system works well, everyone benefits.
And when it fails, everyone pays the price.