Scharfschuetzer
Member
I just saw on the news that police departments are now complaining of the ammo shortage. Reports are that some departments are now having trouble conducting firearms training.
How many rounds/man/year would one plan on?
A responsible department orders ammo off of state contracts at budget time and gets ammo dropped shipped from the factory. When I was running the show at my department, we always had ammo at a preset price. Maybe smaller departments do otherwise and get caught in the availability and price wars.
A responsible department orders ammo off of state contracts at budget time and gets ammo dropped shipped from the factory. When I was running the show at my department, we always had ammo at a preset price. Maybe smaller departments do otherwise and get caught in the availability and price wars.
Not all departments have access to state bid contracts for supplies or equipment. Smaller agencies cannot hope to achieve preferential treatment for orders, and certainly cannot get the same prices for supplies and equipment that larger quantity orders provide. In the majority of smaller departments the individual officers are expected to provide their own uniforms, firearms, and ammunition (sometimes with an allowance, more frequently just as a condition of employment). Individual officers may purchase firearms and ammunition approved for duty use with the federal excise tax (11%) deducted from the prices. Some states waive background checks for credentialed LEO's, others do not.
Short version: there is no general rule that applies. Some dated information that might be of interest:
About half of all incorporated municipalities in the US (cities, towns, etc) have no police departments, relying solely on county sheriffs or state agencies.
Nearly 60% of all US law enforcement agencies (police, sheriff, etc) have fewer than 10 full-time employees, and most of those do not maintain services 24 hours per day (relying on on-call officers for emergencies, or response by next available unit for non-emergencies).
In the major metro areas the average response times for high-priority calls is over 30 minutes. In many rural areas response times are measured in hours, not minutes.
Many of the duties of a police or sheriff department are spelled out by statute; in other words, some things must be done without fail. Among those tasks there is no general requirement to conduct patrol operations or respond to the scene of a reported incident. Short version: priorities are forced on departments, usually with little or no latitude in execution.
In the US we have become accustomed to seeing LE operations performed in certain ways and certain services have become common. But that has not always been the case. Local police services have existed for only about 150 years, beginning with the major eastern cities (Boston and New York City were among the very first) and gradually adopted by others. Prior to that the sheriffs (elected officials) were usually expected to operate the jail and serve the writs and process of the courts, while local citizens (the proper term is "popular militia") were expected to apprehend violators and deliver them to the sheriff. Any investigation of a crime was typically up to the victim, frequently achieved by retaining private detectives or private police forces. Even publicly-provided prosecutors are a relatively recent development; prior to about WW1 it was not unusual for crime victims or business associations to retain lawyers to act as prosecutors in cases affecting themselves.
One thing that has not changed, and probably never will change, is that priorities are established at each step of the process. Those priorities may include financial and budgetary considerations, and may also include political decisions. We are still seeing examples daily, defund the police movements, political entities adopting policies of non-intervention or non-prosecution in certain matters, etc.
I doubt that finding sufficient ammunition for training is at the top of the priorities list in many cities, counties, or states at this point in time.
I having been submitting the order for my departments ammo since 2012. We order through a distributor and the ammo is dropped shipped from the manufacturer...Federal for 5.56 and 12 gauge, Speer for 9mm, Winchester for 38 Special and Hornady for .308 duty ammo. Federal for outdoor range and indoor range (no lead frangible) training ammo.
I hate to say it, but all this "if you ordered it on time", "Used the state contract" and "You can get now if you are wiling to pay more" is nonsense when it comes to the most common calibers used across the nation in LE. It's a simple supply and demand issue....and demand has been outrunning supply by a mile since last summers riots.
One bullet was enough for Barney.
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