As Goodhue Police Chief Josh Smith struggled this summer to fill vacancies in his small department, he warned the town’s City Council that unless pay and benefits improved, finding new officers would never happen.

When nothing changed, Smith quit. So did his few remaining officers, leading the Minnesota town of 1,300 residents to shutter its police force in late August.

America is in the midst of a police officer shortage that many in law enforcement blame on the twofold morale hit of 2020 — the coronavirus pandemic and criticism of police that boiled over with the murder of George Floyd by a police officer. From Minnesota to Maine, Ohio to Texas, small towns unable to fill jobs are eliminating their police departments and turning over police work to their county sheriff, a neighboring town or state police.

  • Chainweasel
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    7
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    1 year ago

    [Redacted for privacy reasons]

      • Chainweasel
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        71 year ago

        Oh no lol, I counted 44 on my way to work this morning before I got to the main road. They’re in desperate need of a culling but no one hunts them anymore because there’s a bad case of Chronic Wasting Disease going around, now they’re just starving to death because they have no natural predators in this area. Although the town got its name from Chief Kill Buck who was a Delaware chief in the area and had a town near where the current town stands.

        • @thelongshot93
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          21 year ago

          Chronic Wasting Disease

          Well there’s a rabbithole I wasn’t expecting. Horrifying what those diseases can do and how much we try to avoid them.

          • @SheeEttin
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            21 year ago

            Fortunately there’s no evidence it affects humans. But then there’s no evidence it doesn’t, either.

      • Alien Nathan Edward
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        01 year ago

        Ever since they changed the name from Chillbuck there’s been a noticeable but difficult to pin down shift in attitudes