May not be something you have interest in but I have a friend who left as a Captain after close to 30 years and he has done well selling law enforcement software. With WELL being the key word. Governments who buy this stuff want to see expertise in the field and the ability to show their decision makers how it will help them do their jobs. Perfect fit for a retired officer. Thank you for your service.
Basscat Eyra
Mercury 250 ProXS
Well it sounds like you are going to get IPERS either way so why don't you salvage what you have left for peace of mind and get out of dodge (dodge being law enforcement).
Where I work we have several production supervisors that have prior work experience in law enforcement and they do pretty well in their jobs. The Waterloo area is a pretty good manufacturing hub in Iowa so there should be local positions available for you. Pay should be good and benefits to at least carry you until you can retire.
On that note, see if Do-It molds is hiring because they are so behind right now and it is just down the road from you!
Stay until you are 55 and then do something else. Pensions rule in this day and age.
Regardless of what you do, quit don't quit, the time is going to pass. If you can retire in another 4.5 years and start drawing immediately, you will regret not doing it. It makes things a lot easier. Good luck to you and thanks for what you do.
I've read this post and your responses to other questions. I was in a nearly identical situation in 2015. I'd completed 20 years and could "retire" and start collecting a pension. I was age 46. In my 19th year I knew it would be time to go at year 20. I began marketing myself and looking for jobs, and I was lucky to find one, a good one. Once I hit the 20 year mark I was OUT. I was incredibly burned out as well. Let's face it, cop work and shift work sucks. I wouldn't trade my experiences for anything, but I'd never go back either. I wish you the best in whatever you decide.
would you consider an older suuuga mama?![]()
2021/ 200 hp 4 stroke pro xs
2021 Triton TRX 18
#3B051045
After 20 years in a water utility. I know exactly where you are coming from. I pulled up stakes moved my family 3 hours away to the country.Now drive a school bus and love every second of it. My vote is YES
~~1995 Gambler~~
Mercury 250 ProXS
Bobs 10" AJ
Dual Power Poles
2-HB 1199's HB 1158 HB 597 in dash
Ultrex 112
"Runs like a cheetah... with his @$$ on fire"
I have hesitated to chime in, since you are wanting a change. I have been retired 4 years after 33 years with one department. The city loved its cops and it paid well, so it would be difficult to complain. Most of us have had similar thoughts of getting out. It is a different job in every way, but you are on the downhill side.
The one thing I learned at FBI National Academy is all departments have similar problems, complaints and personalities. You might be happier doing something else, but what if it is worse? Ride it out, take the pension and move on.
I appreciate it. I applied for a job yesterday just to test the waters. Excellent pay with great benefits. Heck I don't even have vision or dental insurance at my current job. As far as my pension I would most likely still work another job regardless if I was collecting that money too. It wouldn't be enough to not live on with a kid in college and my lifestyle. I am at peace with whether or not I even get an interview.
Good for you. We spend so much time at our jobs, we must find at least something good there. After working 25 years in the bank i decided to change my career and started to learn ecommerce website development. I can't say that it was an easy step and can't say i did everything right at the beginning but it was definitely worth it. Now i am independent and can decided by myself when i should work and when shouldn't. I also decided if i need any help or i can do the whole job alone. It gives me flexibility and definitely peace of mind.
Last edited by RockOn; 05-30-2022 at 04:53 AM.
I was in the same boat after 13 years at a large department. I happened across a management job in the healthcare world at a local
hospital. There is more money in private sector and the stress is way less, for me at least. My blood pressure dropped 15 points in a matter of 3 months. I wish you the best and stay safe!
Last edited by GABuckeye; 05-13-2022 at 08:20 PM.
Quick update. I finished the year out. Am vested in my pension and can now collect at 50 vs the 55 if I left early. Gave my two weeks notice yesterday and am walking away from law enforcement. I already found a sales job selling post frame building components to various businesses with active accounts plus I can still sell buildings too. It feels like what I need to be doing now. Thanks again for all the advice to stick it out. I am at peace moving on.
Aaron
Attorneys that I know that are prosecutors and defense attorneys tell me about conversations that occur when everyone is sitting around waiting for the judge, the arrival of prisoners, during lunch breaks, etc. Officers are burned out and jaded everywhere and they have been less circumspect talking about it and expressing their desire to get out.
Good luck to you.
~~1995 Gambler~~
Mercury 250 ProXS
Bobs 10" AJ
Dual Power Poles
2-HB 1199's HB 1158 HB 597 in dash
Ultrex 112
"Runs like a cheetah... with his @$$ on fire"
I retired from law enforcement after 36 years. I have been retired since 2006 and now can fish every week day, if I chose to. The environment, in Nashville,Tn.,has changed dramatically over the years. I was fortunate enough to have served my time when people respected the law and the people that enforced it. I’m glad I left when I did, now is not the time to be a human target, 24/7. The liberal Democrats that run the city care more for the drug heads and the protesters that March anytime someone gets arrested.
The sentiment toward law enforcement has definitely changed and not for the better, in my humble opinion. Good luck in your new found field. Definitely a smart move.