Women make up a fraction of law enforcement departments, but research shows they use less force than male officers and are the subject of fewer lawsuits and complaints.

Police departments in Hawaii are being asked to significantly boost the number of women in their ranks with the recent passage of , which aims to increase diversity among law enforcement agencies in the state. 

The bill, which awaits the governor鈥檚 signature, sets a goal of having 30% of law enforcement staff be women or people who identify as nonbinary by 2030. The measure also calls for departments to recruit officers from diverse backgrounds. About 13% of sworn personnel in the Honolulu Police Department were women in 2023, on par with the national average. 

Improving the diversity of law enforcement agencies nationwide is vital for fostering trust between those agencies and the public, legislators acknowledged in the bill, referencing key findings in the that shows the need for greater representation of women and minorities in law enforcement roles across the country.

The Honolulu Police Department set ambitious goals in the past for increasing the number of women on the force but has made only incremental progress, inching from 10% of the force in 2014 to 13% in 2023. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2022)

Persistent barriers remain between women and jobs in law enforcement, though, including entrenched departmental cultures favoring men and policies that hinder the balance between policing careers and family responsibilities, according to a 2019 .听

鈥淚鈥檓 glad they are pushing to bring in more female officers,鈥 said Erica Paredes, a deputy sheriff at the Hawaii Department of Law Enforcement. 鈥淚t will be a great opportunity for us to show we belong as well.鈥

Paredes said her department employs fewer than 20 women out of 400 people on staff. She knows of only one other woman working in her entire building.听

鈥淵ou have these masculine guys,鈥 Paredes said, 鈥渁nd then you have females that remind people of aunty or mom. So it鈥檚 a different thing we bring to the table.鈥

Besides a written test, Paredes said she had to pass a physical agility test that included running 1.5 miles in less than 18 minutes, alongside minimums for push-ups and sit-ups. There also were psychological exams, voice analysis assessments and tests on legal knowledge. Paredes recalled it took her a year to complete the process, including six months spent at the police academy.

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Paredes, who has three children, said the transition into law enforcement was difficult in the beginning, as she had to rebalance her life.

鈥淵ou have the role of being there as a mom and kind of having to be there for your kids when it comes time for school work or bedtime,鈥 Paredes said, 鈥渁nd sometimes, you’re not able to be there.鈥澛

Multiple agencies, including the Honolulu Police Department and the State of Hawaii Organization Of Police Officers, submitted testimony in support of the bill.

The Policing Project at NYU School of Law, while applauding the ambition of having 30% female officers in every law enforcement agency in the state by 2030, pointed out that it might be unrealistic due to the staff retirement and turnover required to make that happen. The organization recommended in testimony that Hawaii set a more achievable target of having 30% women in recruit classes by 2030.

The Policing Project is one of the organizations behind the national 30×30 Initiative, an effort to increase the representation of women in police recruit classes to 30% by 2030. The project also focuses on ensuring that department policies and culture actively support the success of qualified women officers throughout their careers. 

Tanya Meisenholder, director of gender equity at the Policing Project, says the initiative has seen results. 

鈥淢adison, Wisconsin, for instance, just got over 30% for recruiting women and we鈥檝e also seen a number of agencies put policies in place around pregnancy and maternal leave,鈥 Meisenholder said. 鈥淗awaii could potentially see these  impacts in the long run.鈥

Sen. Karl Rhoads, who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, said the bill is a first step in the right direction.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important to have diversity in any profession, people from various backgrounds and educational perspectives,鈥 Rhoads said, 鈥渆specially in law enforcement.鈥 

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