TRENTON – Attorney  General Gurbir S. Grewal today addressed more than 1,300 members of law  enforcement, relatives of fallen officers, mental health experts, chaplains, and  other stakeholders as he opened a two-day “Resiliency Summit” organized to  address the vital issue of helping officers cope with the emotional, mental and  physical stress they endure on a daily basis to protect the residents of New  Jersey. 
                                    In addition to shining a  spotlight on the critical goals of promoting officer well-being and preventing  officer suicides, the summit is providing initial basic training to Resiliency  Program Officers (“RPOs”) from across the state.  In establishing the New Jersey Resiliency  Program for Law Enforcement (“NJRP-LE”)—the first statewide program of its kind  in the nation—AG Grewal issued a Directive requiring every state, county, and  local law enforcement agency to designate an RPO who will be trained in  resiliency and will ultimately train all officers in his or her department.  The “bridge training” at the summit will give  RPOs the basic tools they need to intervene and help officers in need as the  often difficult holiday season approaches.   The RPOs will receive further training next year. 
                                    Governor Phil Murphy  delivered the keynote address on the opening day of the summit, which is being  held at the Trenton War Memorial.   Governor Murphy declared today New Jersey Law Enforcement Resiliency  Day.  
                                    “Our men and women in  uniform make sacrifices – big and small – every day to keep the people of New  Jersey safe,” said Governor Murphy. “In turn, we owe them the support they need  to excel in both their professional and personal lives. Promoting mental health  and preventing suicides within the law enforcement community is a critical step  in ensuring that our officers and their families are prepared to deal with  stresses experienced on the job. No one should ever suffer alone in silence.” 
                                    “The danger, conflict and  tragedy that police officers confront on a daily basis subject them to stress and  trauma that, if not addressed, can lead to health problems, mental and emotional  issues, and officer suicides, which are increasing nationwide,” said Attorney  General Grewal.  “Officers put their  lives on the line to protect us, and we owe it to them to provide the support  they need and not let them suffer  in silence.  Through this statewide  resiliency program, we are working to give law enforcement officers the tools  they need to cope with their difficult jobs.” 
                                    “As we approach the holidays—which  can be an emotionally difficult time —the training we are conducting at this Resiliency  Summit will mean that each police department across New Jersey will have a  trained officer who is prepared to throw a lifeline to officers in need and who  will ultimately be trained to teach resiliency to every officer,” Attorney  General Grewal added.  “This is a turning  point for law enforcement in New Jersey.” 
                                    “Through this summit, we  are training and mobilizing hundreds of officers to go back to their police  departments with a message that it is OK to need help and it is OK to talk  about it,” said Director Veronica Allende of the Division of Criminal Justice.  “For too long a culture of silence and stoicism has prevailed in law  enforcement, but we’ve learned that strength comes from communication and support.  Resiliency is strength for the long run.” 
                                    AG Directive 2019-1 –  issued by Attorney General Grewal on Aug. 6, 2019 – requires all law  enforcement officers in the state to be trained in the NJRP-LE by the end of  2022.  All Resiliency Program Officers  will receive their full training in 2020 and they will be able to begin  training their departments once that is completed.  The full training is a two-day program with a  mix of lectures and practical exercises.   “Master Resiliency Trainers,” who will train the RPOs, also are  participating in the “Resiliency Summit.”   
                                    The NJRP-LE is not  designed to replace already existing programs, such as Employee Assistance  Programs, the Police Chaplain Program of New Jersey, or the very successful  “Cop2Cop” program, that already provide a support and referral structure for  officers in need or in crisis.  Instead,  it is designed to work in tandem with these programs by widening the net to  cover all law enforcement officers, not just those in crisis or need. 
                                    The “bridge training” being conducted during the two-day Resiliency Summit  will include the following sessions and topics, among others: 
                                    
                                      - Overview of the New Jersey Resiliency Training       Program for Law Enforcement 
 
                                      - Suicide Prevention and the QPR Method:       Question—Persuade—Refer
 
                                      - Employee Assistance Programs and RPO       Confidentiality 
 
                                      - Effects of Stress-Induced Trauma on the Brain 
 
                                      - Benefits of the Police Chaplain Program of New       Jersey 
 
                                      - How Cop2Cop Will Interface with the NJRP-LE       program 
 
                                      - Overview of the Maple Shade Police Department       Pilot for Resiliency Training for Families 
 
                                      - “Back from the Brink:  Stories of       Resiliency”— Roundtable discussion featuring firsthand       accounts from two retired       officers: one officer who responded to the suicide of his best friend, an       officer himself; and another officer who almost committed suicide.  Those retired officers and a family       member of an officer who committed suicide will discuss the resiliency       techniques they used to recover.                                    
 
                                     
                                    A recent white paper  commissioned by the Ruderman Family Foundation found that police  officers are more likely to die by suicide than in the line of duty. According to Blue H.E.L.P., a nonprofit  organization that tracks and monitors law enforcement suicides, at least 167  officers died by suicide last year in the U.S., more than the total number of  line-of-duty deaths.  In New Jersey,  according to this organization, 37 law enforcement officers reportedly have  died by suicide since 2016.  These statistics  are believed to  be conservative because  law enforcement suicides have been historically underreported.  
                                    Job stress also puts law  enforcement officers at a higher risk for health- and social-related issues,  such as high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, substance misuse, family  and relationship stress, and self-harm.  The  NJRP-LE is designed to change a culture in which officers are often reluctant  to seek help for work-related stress. The program fosters an environment that  encourages officers to communicate with each other and their families.  
                                    The NJRP-LE also  recognizes that officers must feel comfortable speaking with an RPO.  As a result, AG Directive 2019-1 protects the  confidentiality of communications between a law enforcement officer and an  RPO.  Law enforcement officers will be  provided a list of all RPOs throughout the state, giving them the option to  speak to an RPO outside of their department.   The Directive also encourages law enforcement to use chaplain programs. 
                                    “The New Jersey  Resiliency Program for Law Enforcement will greatly expand and strengthen the  safety net we have in place to protect our law enforcement officers and help  them to deal with the secondary dangers of policing, including the emotional  and mental challenges they face every day as they perform their difficult  jobs,” said Pat Colligan, President of the New Jersey State Policemen’s  Benevolent Association. “Beginning with this summit and continuing in every  police department across the state, we will be providing all of our officers  with the necessary training, tools and resources to promote resilience and  well-being.  This is an important day for  police officers in New Jersey.” 
                                    “I would like to thank  Attorney General Grewal on behalf of the members of the New Jersey State  Fraternal Order of Police for working hard to put this resiliency program  together with the help of all of our law enforcement groups,” said Robert W.  Fox, President of the New Jersey State FOP. “This program is well overdue to  protect our officers who protect our citizens every day.” 
                                    Attorney General Grewal  thanked Robert Czepiel, Chief of the Prosecutors Supervision and Training  Bureau in the Division of Criminal Justice, for leading the efforts to organize  the Resiliency Summit.  Czepiel is responsible  for overseeing the statewide officer resiliency program as the state’s  first-ever Chief Resiliency Officer. 
                                    Attorney General Grewal  also thanked the members of the Resiliency Program Working Group for their  assistance in the creation and expansion of the New Jersey Resiliency Program  for Law Enforcement. Members of the group include representatives from the  Division of Criminal Justice, the Burlington County Prosecutors Office, the  Ocean County Prosecutors Office, the County Prosecutors Association of New  Jersey, the New Jersey State Police, the FBI National Academy, the New Jersey  Department of Corrections, the New Jersey State Parole Board, the Camden County  Department of Corrections; the Atlantic County Sheriff’s Department, the New  Jersey State Policemen's Benevolent Association, the State Trooper’s Fraternal  Association, the New Jersey State Troopers Non-Commissioned Officers  Association, the New Jersey State Association of Chiefs of Police, the  Pemberton Township Police Department, the Maple Shade Police Department, the  Burlington Township Police Department, the Lakewood Police Department, the East  Windsor Police Department, the Trenton Police Department,  the Village of Ringwood Police Department,  the Bergenfield Police Department, the Division of Mental Health and Addiction  Services’ Disaster and Terrorism  Branch, the Police Chaplain Program of New Jersey,  Acadia Healthcare, the New Jersey County Chiefs of Detectives Association, the  Passaic County Sheriff’s Office-Superior Officers Association, the New Jersey  State Fraternal Order of Police, the Institute for Forensic Psychology, the Ian  Oliu Foundation, and the Family & Friends of Detective Sergeant Edward  Zurbyzcki. 
                                    View the   Resiliency Summit Agenda 
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