New Cobb public safety director abruptly says he’s retiring

Mike Register, Cobb public safety director

After being on the job only a few months, Mike Register is retiring as the Cobb public safety director.

His abrupt announcement was released by the county late Tuesday evening, citing “increasingly urgent family issues” that are prompting him to move out of Cobb. Register will stay on through Aug. 31.

Here’s the statement Register issued via the county:

“I was deeply honored to be Police Chief and Public Safety Director and appreciated the support of the Board and County Manager. I regret personal issues are tearing me away from this job, and I leave with a sense of accomplishment.”

“I will always treasure my time in Cobb County and I will always love this county and truly believe it is the greatest county in the state of Georgia with the greatest public safety employees in the state.”

Register was appointed public safety director in April by the Cobb Board of Commissioners after serving as police chief since 2017. The public safety director oversees police, fire, 911, emergency management and animal services in Cobb.

He was credited by some as being a morale-boosting force as county police officers and firefighters received seven-percent pay raises in the Cobb fiscal year 2020 budget that was adopted last month.

But less than three weeks later, commissioners will have to find a replacement.

While he was police chief Register emphasized community policing, forming a community affairs unit that included an officer in each of the five county precincts to informally meet with citizens at coffee shops and other venues. Register also held a series of public meetings with Cobb religious and community leaders.

Cobb County manager Rob Hosack issued the following statement:

“We understand that family comes first to Mike and are saddened that he will leave us. He did tremendous things in his short time in the position and we will be considering our options for the Public Safety post in the coming days.”

In June, Register spoke to the East Cobb Business Association, saying one of his objectives was to “make public safety cool again” as a career for young people.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

New Cobb public safety director: We have to make profession ‘cool again’

Mike Register, Cobb public safety director

A few weeks into his tenure as the Cobb public safety director, Mike Register was blunt about one of the biggest obstacles his department faces, perhaps as much as the salary and retention concerns that have been expressed in recent months.

Perceptions do matter, and they matter a lot, Register said in remarks earlier this week to the East Cobb Business Association.

“Somehow, we have got to make public safety cool again to our young people,” he said.

Part of the reference was to salaries and benefits, as Cobb salaries lag other jurisdictions in metro Atlanta and the county struggles to fill openings.

But he also mentioned a social media environment rife with critical comments about those in law enforcement, in particular after police shootings.

“The whole is being vilified for the sake of the few,” Register said. “Those in uniform are committed. Somehow we have to communicate that.”

He was drawn to a law enforcement career after being kidnapped as a teenager in Macon. The police officers who worked to free him kept in touch after his release.

“They checked on me, they worried about me,” Register said. “Today is a different time,” a reference to trends he’s seeing that “less and less of our young people want to be in law enforcement.”

Formerly the Cobb Police Chief, Register has taken on an expanded role overseeing police, fire, emergency management, 911 and animal services in a department with around 2,000 employees.

Much of that time has been spent hearing out those who have been vocal in urging Cobb commissioners to pay and support them better.

Last month, commissioners approved a one-time bonus of $1,475 for selected police, fire and sheriff’s employees with good performance evaluations.

The move was considered a first step toward a more comprehensive approach to hiring, keeping and encouraging public safety employees.

Related stories

Steven Gaynor, head of the Cobb Fraternal Order of Police, said he’s glad Register is “fighting for us” and especially since he now has a direct line to commissioners.

Chairman Mike Boyce has proposed a seven-percent pay raise for public safety employees, but Gaynor said he’ll feel better when he “sees a plan” for a step-and-grade hiring and pay raise program—similar to what teachers get in Cobb County schools—that he thinks will go a long way toward solving lingering problems.

Register said “it’s no secret in Cobb that we’ve been struggling” to bring up salaries and address retention and benefits concerns. He said he’s hopeful commissioners will address the salary boost this year, and then the step-and-grade program for the 2021 fiscal year budget.

Gaynor said it’s “made a big difference” for citizens to speak out on issues that he and others have been raising for years.

One of them is Susan Hampton, who coordinates Cobb public safety appreciation dinners put on by the East Cobb Business Association. In comments before commissioners this spring, she had been asking for a 10-percent pay raise and step-and-grade in the upcoming 2020 budget.

She acknowledges the seven-percent raise this year and step-and-grade for next year is a more realistic scenario.

Hampton also said after Tuesday’s ECBA luncheon she was encouraged by Register’s appointment, as he is a “common voice” for public safety employees. “He’s got their backs.”

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb public safety advocates say proposed pay raise not enough

As the Cobb Board of Commissioners approved the hiring of a new public safety director Tuesday night, many of those working for county public safety agencies and members of the public told them that a proposed five-percent pay increase isn’t sufficient.Susan Hampton, Cobb public safety advocates

That’s how much more Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce wants to pay them in his draft fiscal year 2020 budget proposal. The boost includes a three-percent hike for all county employees, plus another two percent for public safety personnel.

For several weeks those working for police, fire, sheriff’s office and 911/emergency agencies have told commissioners morale is deteriorating because of poor salary and benefits packages and retention rates, compared to other jurisdictions in metro Atlanta.

Among those speaking out was Susan Hampton (in photo), an East Cobb citizen who helps organize an annual public safety appreciation dinner for police officers in Precinct 4 and another for Cobb firefighters.

“I am begging you to fix it now,” she said as the last of a long line of public speakers demanding immediate action, and not later in the summer, during the budget process.

“Fix it now” was a message some brought to the meeting as they held up signs and wildly applauded what Hampton and others were saying.

Commissioners named Cobb Police Chief Mike Register the new public safety director, and he pledged to those in the audience to “make public safety a better place to work.”

The vote to approve Register was 4-1, with Commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb opposed, saying he’d prefer the $300,000 or so budgeted for public safety director (half salary, the rest support staff) go to addressing staffing shortages.

Ott said he wasn’t opposed to Register, whom many praised during the evening, getting the job.

Related stories

Hampton, who’s been especially vocal about what she has called a public safety “crisis” in Cobb, said starting police officers in Cobb are paid around $40,000 a year, compared to $48,800 in Atlanta and Brookhaven.

After five years of service, that Cobb officer would get $44,000. A five-percent raise would result in a salary level of $46,000, she said. In Gwinnett, officers at the five-year level are paid around $53,000, while in Atlanta and Brookhaven it’s around $59,000.

“A five-percent increase will not make Cobb County competitive,” she said.

To fund the extra two percent raise, Boyce has proposed not funding an allotted 40 new police officer positions and another 40 new sheriff’s office positions.

In other words, Hampton concluded, “public safety has to fund their own increase.”

She suggested that the county use revenues from projected growth in the county tax digest this year to help pay for additional public safety spending.

Others urged the commissioners to address retirement and retention issues they say are getting worse.

Steven Gaynor of the Cobb Fraternal Order of Police said the savings from not funding a public safety director, as Ott prefers, “wouldn’t have helped us much.”

Gaynor requested a 10-percent raise and prefers a step and grade retirement system that Ott has suggested.

The most pressing issue, Gaynor said, is filling job openings that are continuing, as the county is conducting a hiring spree for public safety.

“We had eight [police academy] graduates last Thursday,” he said, “but we lost 13. We cannot keep this up. . . .

“Set in place a plan that will take us into the future.”

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

Cobb police chief recommended to become new public safety director

Cobb Police Chief Mike Register has been tapped by County Manager Rob Hosack to become the county’s new public safety director.Mike Register, Cobb Police Chief

Hosack will formally present his recommendation Tuesday to the Cobb Board of Commissioners (read his letter to the board here).

Register, who has been police chief since May 2017, was recommended from a group of four individuals to succeed Sam Heaton, a former Cobb fire chief who retired last month.

Register, a retired military veteran who served with Cobb PD for 19 years and later was the the Clayton County Police Chief, is a doctoral candidate in public policy.

Among his initiatives since returning to Cobb include beefing up community-based policing, with a community officer in each of the five police precincts, and holding occasional meetings with faith and other community leaders in the county.

The change at the top of the department comes as commissioners have been pressed by public safety personnel and citizens to improve salary, benefits, retention and other initiatives to address staffing shortages some have said has reached crisis proportions.

Understaffed police and fire services also are among of the primary factors behind the ongoing East Cobb cityhood movement, and are two of the proposed three services included in a bill that will be taken up next year in the Georgia legislature.

At recent commissioners’ meetings, those pushing for more staffing have noted that all five Cobb police precincts have shortages on their patrol “beats.” East Cobb’s Precinct 4 has only eight of 10 beats fully staffed, the least-staffed of all, according to Cobb Fraternal Order of Police head Steven Gaynor.

Mike Register, Cobb Police Chief
Cobb Police Chief Mike Register speaking to the East Cobb Civic Association in Aug. 2017 (ECN file).

Cobb currently has 82 police officer openings, and is on pace to lose 100 officers this year. That’s how many applications come in every week, but only a quarter or so of them make the first cut.

Other shortages are in fire/EMS and sheriff’s deputies positions.

The public safety director oversees those functions, along with the county’s 911 dispatch service, emergency management agency and animal services.

In a draft fiscal year 2020 budget proposal released last week, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce has included recruitment bonuses for public safety, but has decided against budgeting for 40 new police officer and 40 new sheriff’s deputy positions.

Commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb told those gathered at a town hall meeting last month that he’s opposed to filling the public safety director’s post, and prefers each of those agency heads to report to the county manager, as has been done in the past.

Ott was the only commissioner voting against Register for police chief, saying he objected to the selection process and not the candidate.

Proponents of more public safety staffing and better salaries are planning to speak out again at Tuesday’s meeting. It starts at 7 p.m. in the second floor boardroom of the Cobb office building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

 

Get Our Free E-Mail Newsletter!

Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!

New Cobb police chief responds to officer incidents, vows to change training, community policing methods

Mike Register, Cobb Police Chief
“We’re having some challenges,” Cobb Police Chief Mike Register told the East Cobb Civic Association Wednesday. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

Mike Register brought several pages of prepared remarks to Wednesday’s East Cobb Civic Association meeting as he aimed to lay out his vision as the newly named Cobb Police Chief.

After detailing his long career in the military and his return to the Cobb PD after serving as Clayton County Police Chief, real-time matters intervened to punctuate Register’s desire to make significant changes in the way officers are trained and how they deal with the public.

An hour before Register’s ECCA address at the East Cobb Library, WSB-TV reported that Lt. Greg Abbott, a 28-year Cobb PD veteran, had been placed on administrative leave after a dash-cam video revealed him making racially charged remarks to a female passenger riding in a car pulled over on a traffic stop in July 2016.

According to what was heard on the video, the white woman reached for her cell phone as Abbott approached, making a reference to police shootings. He said to her: “Remember, we only kill black people. We only kill black people, right?”

In the WSB-TV report, Abbott’s attorney said the officer’s comments were not taken in their proper context, claiming he was trying to defuse the situation.

Register, who succeeded retired chief John Houser in June, told the ECCA gathering that the officer’s comments were “hurtful,” and were “inappropriate in any context and not indicative of the values we’re trying to instill in the Cobb Police Department.”

At one point during his ECCA appearance, Register was summoned out of the room for a few minutes by County Manager Rob Hosack.

UPDATED, 4 p.m. Thursday: At a news conference on Thursday, Register and other county officials said Abbott would be terminated, adding that “it’s not the kind of decision we make lightly.”

On Tuesday, Cobb Police had to respond a WSB-TV report, based on a body-cam video, of an officer shooting at an unarmed teen eight times last November. That officer had already announced his resignation, and the Cobb District Attorney’s office recommended no charges.

Register said the video of that incident prompted him to call for changes in the Cobb PD regarding use of force and firearms training (The suspect’s lawyer is planning a lawsuit, according to the WSB-TV report).

After the second incident, Register admitted in his ECCA remarks that “we’re having some challenges.”

Read more