Philadelphia Police Department’s go-to man retiring [The Philadelphia Inquirer]
June 25--When Philadelphia police officers have questions about the nuts and bolts of the department, be it evidence storage, fingerprinting, or employee-assistance programs, there's a good chance Chief Inspector Robert Davis knows the answer.
Davis, who heads the department's Support Services bureau, has over the last decade become an expert on the finer details of what it takes to keep the 6,600-plus members of the Philadelphia police force up and running.
Davis, who retires Friday after 42 years on the job, still isn't quite sure how he became the behind-the-scenes details man in recent years. It happened gradually, he said.
"I can keep a lot up here," he said, tapping the side of his head with the tip of a finger. "It's a lot of work, but it depends greatly on the people you have working under you. I've always been fortunate to have people who made the job a lot easier."
Since joining the department in 1968, Davis has worked in almost every branch, including Internal Affairs, the Special Victims Unit, the Hazardous Materials Unit, and the district that covers Center City, where he was a rookie patrolman.
"He's very organized, and he makes it his job to be very knowledgeable about whatever he's doing," said Deputy Commissioner Jack Gaittens.
Raised in the Northeast, Davis graduated from Father Judge High School and attended Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, where he played for the basketball team until a leg injury forced him to quit.
Davis left school and had no plans until he opened the newspaper one day and saw a classified ad looking for people to administer a test for police officers.
After a few months of working as a test moderator, Davis decided to give the police exam a shot himself. He passed and joined the department a month before his 22d birthday, drawing a salary of $6,907.
Davis worked in Center City for eight years, then in two North Philly districts before making lieutenant.
"The best part of my career was my years on the street," Davis said. "Working on the street takes you to the heart of why you became a police officer, and it can be very rewarding."
After making captain in 1986, Davis was assigned to what was essentially the department's quality assurance division. He was tasked with reviewing police reports and organizing information to ensure numbers and crimes were reported accurately. Years later he was transferred to Community Affairs, then Internal Affairs. Before he knew it, he had learned a little bit about everything, Davis said.
In 2005 he was put in charge of Support Services, an umbrella bureau that handles the department's human resources, offender processing, criminal records and identification, vehicle impounds, and security at Police Headquarters, among other duties.
Many of the tasks Davis tackled have been far from enviable. When the department had to install fire alarms and sprinklers in every cell where prisoners were kept throughout the city, it was Davis' job to oversee the painstaking process of updating of fire codes. When the department took over several rooms in City Hall to be used for spillover evidence storage, it was Davis' job to make sure the rooms were renovated and to see that all evidence was properly labeled.
"These aren't glamorous projects, but to Bob it wasn't about that," Gaittens said. "He sees it as, somebody has to do this, so it should be done right."
After Davis' retirement party Friday, he will leave the department with an annual pension estimated at around $104,000. As for his future, his only plan so far is to spend as much of the summer as possible in Ocean City, N.J., with his wife, three children, and twin toddler granddaughters.
"People say when you retire that you don't miss the job, you miss the people," he said. "But for me that's not true, because I'm starting to miss the job already."
Contact staff writer Allison Steele at 215-854-2641 or [email protected].
To see more of The Philadelphia Inquirer, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.philly.com/inquirer.
Copyright (c) 2010, The Philadelphia Inquirer
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
For more information about the content services offered by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services (MCT), visit www.mctinfoservices.com, e-mail [email protected], or call 866-280-5210 (outside the United States, call +1 312-222-4544)



KLC insurance director fired [The Lexington Herald-Leader, Ky.]
Advisor News
- Using digital retirement modeling to strengthen client understanding
- Fear of outliving money at a record high
- Cognitive decline is a growing threat to financial security
- Two lessons career changers wish they knew before starting the CFP journey
- Americans less confident about retirement as worries grow
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- CareScout Joins Ensight™ Intelligent Quote LTC & Life Marketplace
- Axonic Insurance Annuities, Built for Banks, Broker-Dealers and RIAs, Now Available through WealthVest.
- Allianz Life Adds New Accumulation-Focused Fixed Index Annuities
- Allianz Life adds new accumulation-focused FIAs
- Industry objects to ‘tone and tenor’ of draft NAIC Annuity Buyer’s Guide
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Son hopes dad’s legal win in Miami spares cancer patients from fighting insurers
- Findings from RTI International Broaden Understanding of Insurance (US Medicaid Spending and Health Insurance Coverage for People Involved in the Criminal Legal System as Children): Insurance
- Researchers at University of Pittsburgh Target Managed Care (The state of hospice: Impacts on equity, quality, and nursing-An AAN consensus paper): Managed Care
- Findings from CareQuest Institute for Oral Health Provide New Insights into Managed Care (Repeated Use of Emergency Departments for Nontraumatic Dental Conditions: Factors Associated With Being a Superutilizer): Managed Care
- Reports Outline Insurance Study Findings from University of North Texas (Health Insurance Coverage and Access To Care Among Older Immigrants: Evidence From the National Health Interview Survey, 2020 To 2023): Insurance
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Agam Capital and 1823 Partners Announce Strategic Partnership to Provide Life Insurers with an End-to-End Value Chain Solution
- AM Best Revises Outlooks to Positive for Western & Southern Financial Group, Inc. and Its Subsidiaries
- Principal Financial Group Announces First Quarter 2026 Results
- SBLI Enhances its OmniTrak Term to Deliver Faster Decisions, More Client Coverage, and Improved Pricing
- Life insurance premium surges, but coverage is still falling short for many
More Life Insurance News