Using Google Workspace, Clarkstown Police Department has transformed the way its officers share information and digital evidence. It’s now exploring opportunities to move other services to the cloud to save more time and money.
Clarkstown Police Department serves the 85,000 citizens of Clarkstown, in Rockland County, New York. It has 156 sworn police officers and 70 civilians and crossing guards, working together to keep the community safe.
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United States
https://clarkstownpd.org/
Using Google Workspace, Clarkstown Police Department has transformed the way its officers share information and digital evidence. It’s now exploring opportunities to move other services to the cloud to save more time and money.
Google Workspace Results
Saving $20K to $30K a year on IT licensing costs alone
• Transforms cross-department information sharing
• Accelerates evidence gathering and processing
• Simplifies maintenance and equipment management
Located on the west bank of the Hudson River in the state of New York, Clarkstown has a population of 85,000. It is the business center of Rockland County, and its 46 square miles include major routes from upstate New York to New York City.
Clarkstown has gained a reputation as one of the safest and best small cities to live in the United States. For that, some credit must go to
“Everybody uses Google Workspace in our organization. We no longer have to print copies of every memo for every employee, and we can share digital evidence faster and more securely than ever.” - Sergeant Brian Gorsky, Information Technology Division, Clarkstown Police Department
Like many municipal police departments, Clarkstown PD is supported by a small IT team. The head is Sergeant Brian Gorsky, who after 17 years as a patrol officer, transferred to the IT division in 2011. At around the same time, Clarkstown PD shared much of its IT with the town hall—which had decided to move to Google Workspace. For Brian, it was an important step forward.
Back then, most patrol officers didn’t have their own email account, and the department didn’t have its own email server. Instead, email was accessible via five shared computers used for officers to write up reports. The department couldn’t give each member of staff his or her own email address because, according to Brian, “there was no good way to synchronize individual accounts.”
Catalyst for a culture change
Cloud-based email was an obvious alternative, so the Clarkstown PD introduced
“Almost everything we do now is electronic, and most of our internal communications are through email,” says Brian. “Everybody now uses Gmail in our organization. We no longer have to print copies of every memo for every employee, and we can share digital evidence faster and more securely than ever.”
By way of example, Brian cites an instance where a citizen might receive a threatening voicemail from someone in the community. The person receiving the voicemail can email it as an MP3 file to the responding officer. The officer then forwards the message to the Digital Evidence Group—via a collaborative inbox set up in
Superior security, substantial savings
“By moving everything onto Google, we're saving $20K to $30K a year in IT licensing.” - Sergeant Brian Gorsky, Information Technology Division, Clarkstown Police Department
Brian has found Gmail an ideal solution for Clarkstown PD’s needs. “It’s been easy to use—important for a workforce with varying degrees of IT knowledge—and the security has been excellent,” he says. “The spam filters are phenomenal. Very little gets through, and in the latest version even more phishing protection has been added.” That security, and the confidence Brian has in it, is clearly crucial for the sharing of digital evidence—particularly where that may include sensitive personal information.
Best of all, it has proved extremely cost effective. “By moving everything onto Google, we're saving $20K to $30K a year in IT licensing,” Brian says. The savings are being invested in additional work with Google Cloud Premier Partner,
Standardizing communications, simplifying collaboration
Gmail is the most important Google Workspace tool for the department at present, but several other products have also proved very useful, particularly for its community engagement work. For instance, the department does a lot of presentations and training, and historically, officers would have to put together their own presentations and often carry around the USB drive where they were stored.
That process has now been replaced and improved using
Templates have also been developed in
Now, that has been replaced by a simple form with drop-down menus. When officers report issues, the desk sergeant enters them on to the form, following a consistent format and terminology thanks to the menus. Once the work is approved by supervisors, the details are automatically added to a spreadsheet in
The administrative burden is lifted from the desk sergeant, and the police department has more information about its vehicles and when they should be back on the road. Brian plans to create more forms, as he begins to use the Google low code development tool
Migrating to its own domain
“Working with Google is refreshing; it feels more like a partnership than other providers.” - Sergeant Brian Gorsky, Information Technology Division, Clarkstown Police Department
An important step for Clarkstown PD was to set up a domain separate from the town hall.
“We were on the clarkstown.org domain,” he explains, “and two non-police department employees over in town hall were super administrators.” To eliminate concerns about outside teams accessing police information, the department created its own domain to have more control over its environment.
For Brian and the team, accomplishing this required a full-blown Google Workspace to Google Workspace migration because the instance is separate. The scale of the project—including migration of all the information stored on
Along with guidance, Brian has found Google support a major asset, particularly for a four-person IT team. “Working with Google is refreshing; it feels more like a partnership compared to other providers.”
Since moving to its own domain, Clarkstown PD has already seen the advantages of having greater control of its IT. “We really wanted to make more use of
Excellent teamwork
The next step planned is the transition of the PD intranet to
Now, the department keeps a list of shift briefings—non-urgent, but useful information passed from one officer to colleagues. For example, it might say someone has an overnight parking permit and can park on the street; other officers won’t then waste time enquiring. Brian’s plan is to replicate that with Sites, but streamline the process by using a reporting form that automatically populates a spreadsheet, and then work with Tempus Nova to generate automatic email notifications, too.
“For me, what we are doing with Google is mostly about collaboration,” Brian concludes. “And collaboration is often what solves major crimes. So much of the technology available to support shared working in law enforcement is hard to use and that makes people hesitant to embrace it. But Google Workspace is intuitive and tools like App Maker are suitable for people like me without a programming background. With a little bit of time and effort, you can create efficiencies, improve processes, and collaborate more effectively.”
*Google Workspace was formerly known as G Suite prior to Oct. 6, 2020.
Deployment Partner (Google Workspace authorized reseller)
Tempus NovaTempus Nova based in Denver, Colorado, is a Google Cloud Premier Partner specializing in Google Enterprise solutions, Google Workspace implementations, cloud computing, and custom application development. It has experience in helping public and private sector organizations transition to Google Workspace.