New Jersey State Park Police

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New Jersey State Park Police
MottoProtecting New Jersey's Treasures and Those Who Visit Them
Agency overview
Legal personality
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionNew Jersey, United States
Size448,000 acres (1,810 km2)
Legal jurisdictionStatewide
Governing bodyState of New Jersey
Operational structure
Agency executives
  • Amanda Smith
  • Chief of Police
Parent agencyNew Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
Child agency
  • N.J. Division of Parks & Forestry, N.J. Division of Fish &Wildlife
Website
https://www.nj.gov/dep/njstateparkpolice/index.htm

The New Jersey State Park Police patrol and protect the State's 54 parks, forests, recreation areas and 130 natural trust preserves which encompass more than 448,000 acres (1,810 km2) and are visited by more than 18 million people each year. Their motto is "Protecting New Jersey's Treasures and the people who visit them." All State Park Police Officers are sworn State Law Enforcement Officers who are PTC certified. Officers have statewide jurisdiction, carry weapons and have all of the arrest and law enforcement powers of any police officer in the state. They are dedicated to safeguarding New Jersey's resources 24 hours a day through the prevention of crime, apprehension of criminals, enforcement of criminal and motor vehicle laws of the state, and enforcement of park regulations. State Park Police respond to public safety emergencies and environmental emergencies as well as provide mutual aid assistance to municipal, county, state and federal law enforcement agencies. They use various methods of patrol, including foot, bike, boat, ATV, and motor patrol.

Functions[]

Operating under the guises of the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry, a child agency of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, NJSPP makes up one of two state law enforcement agencies within the arsenal of the NJDEP. Organized under the administration of the Assistant Commissioner for the Office of Natural and Historic Resources, NJSPP is joined by their counterparts with the New Jersey Division of Fish & Wildlife - Bureau of Law Enforcement which also operates as a child agency of the NJDEP. Noteworthy enough, this section includes the New Jersey Forest Fire Service as well as a myriad of others. Although NJSPP headquarters is located in Trenton, New Jersey, being tasked with such an expansive coverage area, the agency operates stations in each operational district in addition to a myriad of other facilities strategically located around the state.

The New Jersey State Park Police is part of the New Jersey Costal Evacuation Plan for Cape May, Atlantic, Ocean and Monmouth Counties. They assist with the UASI Region, Urban Areas Security Initiative, which supports select high-threat, high-density urban areas in order to address their unique multi-discipline planning, organization, equipment, training, and exercise needs in building and sustaining capabilities to prevent, protect against, respond to, and recover from threats or acts of terrorism. Additionally, they assist the County Prosecutors Offices in all 21 New Jersey Counties with their Child Abduction Response Teams (CART), providing All-Terrain Vehicles and K-9 Units for searches.

Another unique function of this agency lies within the deployability of its K9 section. Established in 2008, the K-9 contingent has grown significantly and now consists of multiple breeds. While the primary purpose of the unit is to provide coverage and service to the organizations needs, they are available 24/7 to assist other agencies in need of a dog. These officers and their animal counterparts are available for searches of lost, missing, or wanted people, explosives detection, narcotics detection, and routine patrol responsibilities. Even more significant though is the fact that the agency also has 1 of only 3 police cadaver dogs in the entire state. These dogs are highly trained to track down the scent of decomposing human remains making them one of the highest requested resources.

Department organization[]

Trenton Headquarters[]

  • Chief of Police
  • Operations Commander
  • Internal Affairs Office
  • Information Technology Office
  • Administrative & Business Services Section
    • Finance & Grant Unit
    • Records Unit
    • Personnel Unit (Recruitment / Retention)
  • Community Policing & Social Outreach Section

State Park Police Training Center[]

  • Training Commander
  • Training & Education Unit
  • Officer Trainee Auxiliary Police Academy

Patrol Operations[]

  • 42 Parks
  • 11 Forests
  • 57 Historic Sites & Districts
  • 44 Natural Areas
  • 130 Natural Trust Preserves
  • 3 Recreation Areas
  • 4 Reservoir Sites
  • 1 Golf Course
  • 5 Marinas

Patrol Areas[]

  • District 1: Southern Region
  • District 2: Central Region
  • District 3: Northern Region

Operations Section[]

  • Patrol Services
    • Targeted Enforcement
  • Special Operations Group
  • Emergency Management Office
  • Investigations Bureau
  • Environmental Crimes Unit
  • K9 Unit (patrol, narcotics, explosives, and cadaver)

Communications Division[]

Staffed 24/7 by dispatchers of the NJDEP Bureau of Emergency Management in a dispatch center accompanied alongside dispatchers from State Police. Referred to as "Trenton Dispatch" the men and women at the DEP Communications Center answer emergency and non-emergency calls from the public requiring a police response in addition to those made to the department's Hot Line number to reporting an environmental emergency: 1 (877) WARN-DEP and also a few others. The center responds to over 50,000 calls every year from the public as well as government and professional agents. Calls to the center are received and evaluated before being forwarded to the appropriate department for action. Given the broad range of the department's responsibilities, a call may be anything from a report of distressed or nuisance wildlife or a lost hiker, to a toxic chemical spill, a forest fire, industrial accident or terrorist event.

In addition to managing the department's 24 phone lines, the communication center also operates and maintains the department's state wide radio network. With radio coverage from High Point to Cape May, the communications center, can directly communicate with the department's field personnel anywhere in the state to support their mission. By doing so they support and dispatch the activities of the NJ State Park Police and Conservation officers. The center's operators are the primary contact for these law enforcement officers on patrol throughout the state, and provide motor vehicle lookups, as well as federal, state and local information checks as needed. The center also handles the activities of the Forest Fire Service and State Hazmat Response Personnel.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""