Clarence O'Neal "C.O." Bradford, known as Brad Bradford during his campaign for Harris Country District Attorney, is an American politician who served as a Houston City Council member and as chief of police of Houston, Texas.
Clarence Bradford | |
---|---|
Member of the Houston City Council from the At-large #4 District | |
In office January 2, 2010 – January 2, 2016 | |
Preceded by | Ron Green |
Succeeded by | Amanda Edwards |
Houston Chief of Police | |
In office January 1997 – January 2004 | |
Preceded by | Sam Nuchia |
Succeeded by | Harold Hurtt |
Personal details | |
Born | Houston, Texas |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Dr. Dee Jackson |
Residence(s) | Houston, Texas |
Occupation | attorney, Police Officer |
Website | [1] |
In 2008, Bradford was an unsuccessful Democratic Party candidate for District Attorney of Harris County, Texas. On November 3, 2009, Bradford was elected to the Houston City Council from At-large Position 4 and took office January 2, 2010.[1] In the 2011 election, Bradford won a second term as a Houston City Council member.
Biography
editBradford holds degrees in law from the University of Houston Law Center, criminal justice from Grambling State University, and a public administration degree from Texas Southern University. Also, he is a graduate of the FBI Academy and Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government Program for State and Local Executives.[2]
He became a resident of the city of Houston in 1979. Bradford has lived in Hiram Clarke, Alief, Fondren Southwest, and MacGregor areas. Bradford served 24 years as a Houston police officer and seven years as chief of police. He was appointed Houston's police chief by Mayor Bob Lanier and re-appointed by Mayor Lee P. Brown. While serving as chief of police, Bradford managed 7,000 personnel and $500 million annual budget. During his tenure, citizens' fear of crime and public safety concerns went from 59% in 1996 to only 10% by the time he left office in 2003, as documented by Dr. Stephen Klineberg of Rice University.
Bradford was part of the leadership team that first developed and implemented community policing strategies in Houston, Texas. Today, more than 80% of the police agencies in America utilize some form of community policing; it is a proven concept in providing public safety services.
Bradford served one of the longest tenures as a Houston police chief and implemented many significant programs and initiatives during his administration. These include the department's first alternative dispute resolution process, American Sign Language Program, assessment center process for promotions, expansion of airport security, city/county jail consolidation project, computer crime mapping, crisis intervention team program, decentralized family violence unit, hate crimes program and Houston Police Online. Bradford also initiated HPD crime laboratory accreditation, the first meet and confer employees’ benefits agreement, established the first Middle Eastern and South Asian community liaison, created the No Trucks in the Left-Lane Motorists Safety Program, implemented a racial profiling prohibition policy, implemented HPD's Top 10 Sex Offenders/Parole Violators Program and created the department's first crime victim services unit. He also opened new police stations at four divisions and police storefronts at five locations. In cooperation with 28 other police agencies and media outlets, Bradford implemented the Technology to Recover Abducted Kids (TRAK) System, and he established the first youth police advisory council in the nation.
Bradford served as a precinct chair and election judge in Harris County, Texas. He served as a senior consultant in the international consulting firm of Brown Group International (BGI). BGI is a full-service consulting firm that provides solutions to problems of government, corporations and individuals. BGI offers services in the areas of public safety, homeland security, crisis management, government relations, community government, personnel selection, litigation support, technology services and international trade.
Additionally, Bradford has served for several years as an adjunct professor in the School of Public Affairs at Texas Southern University, teaching two particular courses: Police Administration and Judicial Administration.
As a Houston City Council member, Bradford focused on the delivery of core services which include water, garbage, infrastructure issues and safety services. In addition to serving on the Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee, he served as chair of the Ethics, Elections and Council Governance Committee, vice chair of the Budget and Fiscal Affairs Committee and chaired a City of Houston Procurement Process Task Force. In January 2012, members of the Houston City Council elected Bradford as vice mayor pro-tem via unanimous vote.
Personal life
editBradford’s civic activities include serving as a precinct chair, election judge, and deputy voter registrar in Harris County, Texas. He holds memberships and volunteers in numerous community activities, including the ENRICH After-School (Evaluating the Out-of-School-Time Needs, Resources and Initiatives in the Communities of Houston) Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo, Education Foundation of Harris County, American Education Technologies Youth Counselor, Grambling State University's Criminal Justice Advisory Board, Wiley College Criminal Justice Institute, DeVry University Industry Advisory Board, 100 Club, Harris County Constable Precinct 7 Advisory Board and frequently serves as a university guest lecturer, crime prevention and safety awareness speaker.
References
edit- ^ Meet the new players Archived 2010-02-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Meet the Players Archived 2010-02-13 at the Wayback Machine