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10-Hour Shift Schedules and Police Management
January 26th, 2014 at 12:36 pm   starstarstarstarstar      

Higher-ranking law enforcement personnel (e.g., Police Chiefs, Sheriffs, Captains, and Lieutenants) tend to look at 10-hour shifts in a different way than their subordinates do. They are well aware of the popularity of 10-hour shifts among the officers/deputies, but often are unable to adopt them due to resource constraints. Let's look at the major considerations in the change to 10-hour shifts from the management perspective.


Overtime

Since four 10-hour shifts add up to 40 hours a week, some people believe 10-hour shifts will eliminate overtime from the work schedule. Unfortunately, this is not always the case as shown below:


Coverage Crews
Schedule Format Average Workweek
1 crew
    5    Rotating shifts
          42
1 crew     6      Fixed shifts           40
2 crews     5    Rotating shifts           42
3 crews   15          Either
          42
4 crews   21          Either
          40

 

A crew can consist of one to hundreds of officers. Unlike many 8 or 12-hour shift schedules that require 4 crews, 10-hour schedules require 5 or more crews. For example, to have 1-person coverage around-the-clock, you need 5 people if you use rotating shifts and 6 people if you use fixed shifts. To have 2-person coverage, you would need 10 people (5 crews of 2 each) with rotating shifts and 12 people (6 crews of 2 each) with fixed shifts.


The most common 10-hour schedules rely on 5 or 15 crews. These schedules average 42 hours a week, the same as most 8-hour and 12-hour schedules that use 4 crews. I occasionally get calls from Police Captains and Lieutenants who have tried to create a schedule on their own, but can't make it work. They didn't realize that the schedule needed an occasional 50-hour work week or that it required more crews. Overtime is unnecessary only when the schedule is comprised of 6 crews or 21 crews (and sometimes with a crewless schedule).

 

Overlapping Shifts

A schedule that uses three 10-hour shifts will have 6 hours a day in which the shifts overlap one another, producing double coverage. There are two common ways to use the overlaps:

  • Overlap each shift by two hours. Officers on the out-going shift can do their paperwork while officers on the in-coming shift are out on the street. This ensures continued coverage throughout the day. This approach tends to be preferred by the officers.

  • Align the overlapping shifts with the busiest period of the day. Coverage can be boosted for 6, 12 or 16 hours a day depending on how the shifts are scheduled. I recommend this approach because the primary reason for having a schedule is to allocate the resources to match the workload. The downside is that it often requires unusual shift start/end times. This approach tends to be preferred by management.

Coverage Reduction

The biggest problem with 10-hour shifts is that they require more resources than 8-hour or 12-hour shifts. A 10-hour schedule requires more staff because the officers are really covering 30 hours a day (three 10-hour shifts). This will either require 25% more personnel or a 25% reduction in the coverage levels. In most cases, headcounts are frozen, so the impact is reduced coverage on each shift.

Even if sufficient staff is available, they are usually needed for other purposes such as absence coverage. Since the absence rates in most police departments are rather high, most Chiefs opt to use any “extra” staff in one of two ways:

  • Increase coverage levels above the minimum. For example, a department needs 3 officers on each shift. This requires at least 12 officers working an average of 42 hours a week. They use their staff of 16 officers to provide 4-person coverage. This allows for up to one absence on each shift.

  • Build relief coverage into the schedule. This is often more efficient than increasing the coverage on each shift. For example, the same department only has 14 officers, so they adopt a 14-week rotating shift schedule in which 2 of the 14 weeks are devoted to relief coverage. This requires fewer staff and provides more flexible absence coverage.

When the "extra" coverage is lost, absences (like vacations, sick time, training, court time, etc.) will have to be covered using overtime. This is the most common reason for rejecting the switch to 10-hour shifts. This is such an important point that I have to repeat it. Adopting 10-hour shifts will reduce the coverage on each shift (except for the periods of overlapping shifts). Since part of this coverage provides a cushion for absences, the 10-hour shifts will result in much higher levels of overtime.

 

Absences

Some people believe that 10-hour shifts will reduce absences. Since the longer shifts provide one additional day off each week, this time can be used for doctor's appointments or other personal business. I am not aware of any studies that confirm this, but it seems possible. The Shift Length Experiment prepared by the Police Foundation did not report any significant reductions in sick leave when switching to 10s (http://www.policefoundation.org/publication/shift-length-experiment/). If there is an impact, it is undoubtedly small. 

 

Conclusions

10-hour shifts are universally popular with the officers. Chiefs or Sheriffs are aware of this, but often lack adequate resources to make the change. The simple fact that 10-hour shifts require at least 25% more staff than other approaches means that few departments can afford them. From what I've seen, it's primarily the larger departments that have adequate resources to adopt 10s. Smaller departments (less than 30 officers) rarely have enough personnel. 

Jack Manuel says:
January 31st, 2015 at 6:07 pm   starstarstarstarstar      

We have 15 patrol officers and provide 24/7 coverage. we are looking to see if 10s makes sense for our dept. Please assist in anyway you can. Thank You.

January 31st, 2015 at 8:53 pm   starstarstarstarstar      

Jack,

When selecting a 10-hour shift schedule, there is always a trade-off between 10 and 12-hour shifts. I boil it down to a simple trade-off. Which is most important to you: (1) boosting the coverage with the overlapping 10-hour shifts or (2) creating extra capacity to cover absences with 12-hour shifts. If you said that you needed extra coverage for part of each day (6, 12 or 16 hours/day) , I would say that 10-hour shifts are a good choice for you. If you said that your top issue was absence coverage or maximizing days/weekends off, I would say 12-hour shifts are best.

Raul A. Gonzalez, Sgt.  says:
August 26th, 2015 at 10:32 am   starstarstarstarstar      

Our Police Dept. is currently on a 8 hour work schedule. We have 4 squads with a Sgt. for each shift, and need assistance in implementing a 10 hour schedule. What are your recommendations

August 26th, 2015 at 11:28 am   starstarstarstarstar      

Raul,

The feasibility of 10-hour shifts depends on your coverage requirements, staff size, and schedule format. Unlike 8 or 12-hour schedules, 10-hour schedules use more crews, so this probably means more than 4 Sgt. would be needed. And because three 10-hour shifts mean you are working 30 hours a day, that will require 25% more officers than three 8-hour shifts.

Most likely your staff size is fixed. So changing to 10s means you will lose coverage. If you had 8-person coverage with the 8-hour shifts, you will have 6-person coverage after changing to 10s. However, you will have 12-person coverage during the 6 hours of overlapping shifts.

The decision on whether to adopt 10-hour shifts is a matter of priorities regarding the best use your staff. You gain by increasing the coverage during your busy period, but you lose your ability to cover absences since the coverage is reduced for the remainder of the day.

Bob Beckham says:
November 24th, 2015 at 6:54 am   starstarstarstarstar      

We are a department of 18 officers.  4 required to be on duty per shift (Days, Evenings and Nights).  We have 6 on Days, 7 on Evenings and 5 on Nights.  Trying to put together a 10 hour schedule but having difficulity having the 4 officers per day required. Thoughts?

November 24th, 2015 at 10:16 am   starstarstarstarstar      

Bob,

It takes at least 21 people on 10-hour shifts to produce 4-person coverage around-the-clock. 10-hour shifts require more staff than 8s or 12s because you are really covering 30 hours a day (three 10-hour shifts). This either requires 25% more staff or a 25% reduction in coverage.


The reason you are having trouble making 10s work for you is because it's impossible. With 8-hour or 12-hour shifts, you would only need 16 people working an average of 42 hours a week (18 with fixed 8-hour shifts).


When you consider absence coverage as well, 10-hour shifts seem like a poor choice for your combination of staff size, coverage requirements, and workload distribution. You probably should focus on 12-hour shifts as the most efficient scheduling choice.

Jeff Dougherty says:
January 10th, 2016 at 9:49 pm   starstarstarstarstar      
Manu says:
August 21st, 2016 at 8:26 pm   starstarstarstarstar      

I am looking at running a MRP team on afternoon with a team of 5 working from 2pm to midnight 5 days on 3 days off , 5 days on 4 days off, 5 days on 3days off over a 25 days cycle. However, I am also thinking at looking at 4pm to midnight .. Nay thoughts on the matter??

Lauri Tuomisto says:
December 2nd, 2016 at 1:23 pm   starstarstarstarstar      

Hi I currently work at a corrections facility and we currently run a 7-3 7-4 8 hour schedule. I am looking for a schedule that runs 12 officers from 6:30am to 10:30am with 10hour shifts is this possible. Also at all time there need to be 3 officers on shift at all times no more no less.

J Jackson says:
August 3rd, 2017 at 6:48 pm   starstarstarstarstar      

Hi,

 

We are trying to go from 8's to 10's. we have a 11 man department with 3 of those being SGTs. Each shift requires 2 patrols. Are we able to do a 10 hour schedule?

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