Puerto Rico Commission on Safety and Public Protection explained

Puerto Rico Commission on Safety and Public Protection
Preceding1:Puerto Rico Safety Council
Dissolved:April 10, 2017
Superseding1:Puerto Rico Department of Public Safety
Jurisdiction:Executive Branch
Parent Agency:Secretariat of Governance
Child1 Agency:Criminal Justice College
Child2 Agency:Firefighters Corps
Child3 Agency:Government Board of the 9-1-1 System
Child4 Agency:National Guard
Child5 Agency:Puerto Rico Police
Child6 Agency:State Agency for Emergency and Disaster Management

The Puerto Rico Commission on Safety and Public Protection (Spanish; Castilian: links=no|Comisión de Seguridad y Protección Pública) is the government agency of the executive branch of the government of Puerto Rico that coordinates, manages, and oversees all the public safety agencies and related private organizations in Puerto Rico. The Commission is composed by the Adjutant General, the Fire Chief, the Police Superintendent, and the Director of the State Agency for Emergency and Disaster Management, with one of the aforementioned officers presiding it as the Commissioner of Safety and Public Protection.

Background

In 1993, the Governor of Puerto Rico through an executive order created the Puerto Rico Safety Council to oversee all matters related to public safety within Puerto Rico. Since its creation the Council was considered highly effective; however, at that time the Council was led by the Governor and required his continued presence so that the Council could operate effectively. This had the consequence of subtracting time from the Governor to focus on other areas of public administration. Because of this, the government created the Commission on Safety and Public Protection with broad powers so that the Commission, rather than the Governor, could implement, manage, coordinate, and oversee all public policy related to public safety in Puerto Rico. On April 10, 2017, governor Ricardo Rosselló disbanded the agency by signing Law 20, Law of the Puerto Rico Department of Public Safety, which absorbed all agencies.[1]

Agencies

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ley del Departamento de Seguridad Pública de Puerto Rico. agencias.pr.gov. 10 April 2017.