IUPA Local 825

IUPA Local 825 We represent all Grant County Sheriff’s Department employees in Grant County, Indiana

04/01/2025
On behalf of the Grant County Sheriff’s Department, our hearts go out to the Richmond Police Department for the loss of ...
09/19/2022

On behalf of the Grant County Sheriff’s Department, our hearts go out to the Richmond Police Department for the loss of K9 Officer Seara Burton. Prayers 💙🖤

08/11/2022

More than enough funds have been placed back into the County's General Fund to bring Grant County up to Standard Says the International Union of Police Associations as they urge the County Council to take another look at the budget.

Grant County Sheriff’s Department Understaffed and Underfunded

Law Enforcement today is facing greater challenges than ever before. Officers are being shot and killed at an unprecedented rate. Officers are being vilified by much of the media and a few feckless politicians. Meanwhile, thankfully, the “defund the police” movement is dying a natural and anticipated death as violent crime has increased where law enforcement personnel have been depleted.

Grant County has not been spared in these challenges. Thankfully, your union and your Sheriff Reggie Nevels, have worked cooperatively to ease the burdens created by recruiting and retention issues. While the jail is still understaffed, those conditions have been eased by enhanced hiring and the movement of some patrol deputies into custody assignments to address shortages. This is, however, a short-term fix. We will be losing three additional correctional officers in the near future.

Union leadership has continued to meet with Sheriff Nevels and incoming Sheriff Delmiro Garcia to further address these challenges. Recruiting and retention are the keys to keep Grant County safe and provide the level of law enforcement necessary to accomplish that goal.

Neighboring jurisdictions are offering greater pay and benefits, luring experienced officers away. We currently have more than enough funds to bring Grant County up to the standards set by our neighbors and stop the exodus while also improving the quality and quantity of new recruits.

We have returned more than enough funds to the General Budget than would be needed to obtain this worthwhile goal.

The closed Juvenile Detention Center has well over one (1) million dollars sitting in this unused budget, which will also be returned to the General Fund.

We urge the County Council to take another look at the County budget and realize the cost vs. benefit of allocating fiscal resources to keep the citizens of Grant County and the men and women who protect it safe and secure. Thanks to the Sheriff and the men and women of the Grant County Sheriff’s Department, we have not had any public safety crises due to these shortages. We urge the County Council to address these issues before the safety of our employees and the citizens of this County are directly affected.

08/01/2022

Our thoughts and prayers go the Elwood PD and the officer’s family.

05/11/2022
03/23/2022

Looking to start a career in Law enforcement? Would you like to make a difference in our Community? Come Join our team.
Benefits include:
Jail Officers starting wages $18.21/ Hour & Merit Deputies starting salary of $48,561.00
Paid Sick, Personal, and Vacation time
Retirement 457 B & Pension
Medical, Dental, Eye, Critical illness, and Life Insurance
Paid Training

Application in link below
https://www.grantcounty.net/files_uploaded/SheriffsDeptApplication.pdf

01/25/2022

We would like to introduce the departments new Senior Chaplain John Pearson! We are excited to have you join our team!

01/04/2022

Our thoughts and prayers are with the family of former Sheriff Oatess Archey.

The below article was copied from the Chronicle Tribune, written by Andrew Maciejewski and was published 12/23/21.

Oatess Archey, States First Black Sheriff, Dies at Age 84.

Oatess Archey’s life was filled with success in the face of adversity.

As Indiana’s first Black sheriff, Archey made history while serving two terms as Grant County’s top law enforcement official, holding the position from 1999 to 2007. Before his death Wednesday at the age of 84, Archey lived through Grant County’s most tumultuous times, leaving a legacy that has inspired many to become public servants serving the community today.

Born in 1937, just seven years after the lynchings of Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith on the Grant County Courthouse lawn, he told the Chronicle-Tribune he experienced the toll that discrimination took from the Black community at the time. Despite the name calling and blatant discrimination – where adults barred him from using Matter Park or the local YMCA facilities – he accumulated accolades throughout his lifetime.

The Indiana Historical Society Press published a book regarding his accomplishments, which spanned from working for the FBI to the U.S. State Department – even working on cases related to the L.A. Riots and the attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan in 1981.

Archey graduated with a bachelor’s degree from Grambling State University, returning to Marion in 1959 with hopes of becoming a teacher and coach. He told the Chronicle-Tribune that those dreams were temporarily put on hold due to adversity caused by racial discrimination.

Despite his record as a standout athlete – with a resume that included a state record time in the 120-yard high hurdles, which later placed him in the Grant County Sports Hall of Fame – and his college degree, Archey was offered a job as a janitor, he said in a previous Chronicle-Tribune report.

“I never thought about segregation, really, because I was their boy when I was in high school,” Archey said in a 2001 interview for a Community History Project submitted to Marion High School and the Marion Public Library. “I was a Marion Giant basketball player. Everybody loved me, I thought. When I came home, they slammed the door in my face.”

Archey eventually worked his way into the classroom. His coaching career made him the winningest track and field coach in Marion High School’s history.

His achievements did not go unnoticed. They inspired current Sheriff Reggie Nevels to follow the path he forged since his youth.

“He took this sheriff’s department to a whole different level… What he brought to the table inspired other African American people to go into law enforcement. Not only African American people, but also people in general.” Grant County Sheriff Reggie Nevels said of Archey’s work.

Before his passing, other prominent Black leaders spoke of his character and accomplishment.

Marion’s NAACP chapter President Joselyn Whitticker said, “He was instrumental in changing things. How his depth of knowledge and what he did in this community, and did not leave him bitter but he moved on. He did not get angry about what did not happen, he just moved on. He could have been very bitter, but Oatess was not.”

Address

Marion, IN
46952

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