BANGOR, Maine — Officer Stephen Jordan, a 25-year veteran of the Bangor police force, will retire on Thursday.

Sgt. Paul Edwards announced in a news release that family, friends and colleagues are invited to attend a gathering for coffee to celebrate Jordan’s career in the department’s training room at 10 a.m. Thursday.

Jordan worked as a patrol officer for his entire career with the Bangor police, beginning in 1988. Prior to that, he worked as communications coordinator for the University of Maine police department and as a patrol officer in Veazie.

Jordan was also an instructor at the Maine Criminal Justice Academy and specialized in OUI enforcement. He was also a drug recognition expert and accident reconstructionist.

Jordan will continue to pursue his second career in nursing after his retirement from police work.

BDN sports freelancer Ryan McLaughlin grew up in Brewer and is a lifelong fan of the New England Patriots, Boston Red Sox, Boston Celtics and Boston Bruins.

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50 Comments

  1. Didn’t Chief Gastia wrongfully fire him, only to get his job back with lot’s of back pay? Another one of Gastia’s little “Oops”.  One of the many reasons Gastia “retired”

    1. He pushed a car out of the way to a call at Union and Ohio I heard. Big Deal!!!!  They let one employee at city hall go in the spring of 2007 and never made the paper because city hall covered it up. Maybe Gastia could fill BDN in on this one. They say it had something to do with pictures on the computer. BDN can you find out what really happened in 2007 or just ask some of the retired police offiers in the past two or three years. They mite beable to fill you in.

  2. Why are we still funding pensions for public servants  after only 25 years on the job?  Nobody in the private sector enjoys a benefit like that.

    1.  I think that 25 years as a cop is probably pretty tough duty. It’s not like he sat on his butt for those 25 years.

      Are you also opposed to military retirements after 20 years?

      1. Yes i don’t believe that after only 20 yrs that tax payers should be able to retire and collect a pension that early.

          1. you deserve it at retirement age. say you start at age 21 you should not be able to retire at age 41 or 42.

      2. I am,  look at the size of most cops, their butts look pretty big to me.  As for military, they can work another 10 years.  Most go in at 18 if they knew they had to stay in for 30 years  most would leave. That would solve the retirement issue.

        1. someone who retires in 2012 as an E-7 with 20 years of service will make $23,901 a year before taxes. An officer getting out as an O-4 makes $41,167.

          That’s money I am totally willing to pay for having deployed 4+ times, been separated from loved ones over countless Christmases, birthdays, etc.

          I’m perfectly fine paying taxes to support these folks.

        2. let me just say this to your comment……..if you ever had to work as hard as people in the military due then you would not oppose the benefits they get…..why dont you go over seas for 18 mths or so away from your loved ones and then possibly come back without an arm or a leg or worse and then u may be able to understand what these men and women due…..oh and are you also saying firefighters dont deserve the benefits they get cause trust me THEY ALL EARN THEM!

    2. Last I knew he contributed his own money each week towards retirement and so did the city…..I’m not sure why you think you are funding it.   Maybe you are young enough to join the force and take part in this sweet deal in the year 2032……Enjoy every moment of it.

        1. The same people that fund concert stages being moved around for a private business, the arena, general assistance ,the development on the waterfront for starters… that’s who.

        2. Well seeing how he off the payroll, I don’t think it matters. Besides shouldn’t you be happy they will replace him with an officer making about %25 less……

    3. Work as a public servant and you can too. When we got employed by the city that was part of the deal. Private Sector, If you really want to complain start in the White House in Augusta and see what they get after 4 yrs??? Good luck Steve

    4. What they have to look forward to when they take the badge.

      Research findings mark the dismal toll of police stress
      “Policing,” writes Dr. John Violanti, one of the leading researchers of law enforcement stress, “is psychologically stressful work filled with danger, high demands, ambiguity in encounters, human misery, and exposure to death.”
      And that may be the least of its dark side.
      “Law enforcement is one of a number of often stressful professions that has attracted the interest of researchers who are compelled to study the stressors involved in a particular line of work and their impact on those engaged in the profession,” says Dr. Bill Lewinski, Executive Director of the Force Science Institute. “For a significant number of cops, the worst part of the job will likely be its long-term negative impact on personal health and wellbeing, ranging from heart problems to cancer to suicide as identified in recent research.”
      The dismal truth is pulled together in a recent special issue of the International Journal of Emergency Mental Health, which devotes its pages to seven major reports on the adverse health outcomes linked to common daily stressors in police work. The findings are drawn in large part from a multi-year study led by Violanti, a former NY State trooper, involving a vast and diverse pool of Buffalo (NY) PD officers.
      Violanti is a professor of social and preventive medicine at the University of Buffalo School of Public Health and Health Professions. His landmark exploration of stress outcomes was funded by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
      A summary of the Journal articles can be accessed free of charge at the NIOSH blog. Click here to visit the site. Within the blog, you can link to abstracts of the various studies.
      It’s not happy reading. Among the highlights:
      • Striking differences between cops and the general population are found in multiple important health-related categories. Officers are nearly twice as likely as civilians to suffer symptoms of depression (12% vs. 6.8%), significantly more show evidence of the metabolic syndrome believed to increase the risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes (25% vs. 18.7%), and nearly four times more likely to sleep less than six hours out of every 24 (31.4% vs. 8%).
      • Sleep problems deepen as stressful feelings intensify. Male officers who perceive themselves having the highest stress levels are nearly six times more likely to get poor and inadequate sleep than the least stressed officers; females nearly four times more likely. Poor sleep adversely affects “emotional regulation,” and as sleep quality deteriorates depression symptoms escalate significantly among both male and female officers.
      • In-depth examinations of obesity and of the metabolic syndrome reveal an association between obesity and depression in male officers and a link between stress and metabolic symptoms in female officers. Females seemed particularly susceptible to stress from “administrative and organizational pressure and lack of support.”
      • Although retired officers are often considered to be at greatest risk for suicide, Violanti’s work suggests otherwise. After a 55-year retrospective of more than 3,200 officers, he reports that suicide rates are 8.4 times higher in working officers, compared to retired officers or those who left law enforcement

    5. I think Bangor retires public works employees at 25 years also.  I respect the police and their work.. I always wonder what the cities debt obligations are to the pensions in Bangor.

    6. Get the crying towels out BAH BAH BAH BAH. That is it should be you give 25yrs and then get out and move on. No you just want to complain about what you did not get. So work until you are 80 or 90 then collect SS not me. I like the 25yr retirement its alot of fun. So if you are 30 you can get on the police force and put 25 in and get out just like the rest of us did. SOOORRRRY. They are not funding it you have to pay 6.5 percent each week into it for 25yrs then collect it.MSRS is very wealthy and each Govenor trys to get into it to help balance the budget. But guess what they can’t touch it.

    7. I nearly fell off the couch just now. That’s the very first thing you wrote that I agree with.

    8. So in the Private Sector you get to be assaulted, shot at, stabbed,  insulted, constantly accused of improrpriaties on a daily,weekly, monthly basis??? For 25 years??? Endure that crap for 25 years and get back to me Bangorian.  He deserves his pension.  PERIOD

  3. Enjoy retirement and nursing Officer Jordan!  You and every other officer with 20 or 25 years of service deserve every cent of your 50% (or so) retirement benefit.  It was great to meet you last Thursday.  Another officer we met with during the last few days told us that you are originally from Caper Elizabeth…my “neck of the woods”.  Stay safe for the next 3 days!

  4. With all the problems this city has been having, I’m sure the veterans have had enough. They are getting out while they are still in one piece. Pretty soon the Bangor PD will be full of newbies. I hope their inexperience will not be a problem.

  5. The young policemen coming on to the Bangor PD  will not see as good a retirement package as the veterans even though they will see way more violence during their careers. Ask any veteran cop and they will tell you that years ago Bangor went to sleep on Sunday night. Ask them if Sunday is slow now. Every day is hard for these guys and ladies. 

    1. Well I am sure some of the work the did helped, but they are using toothbrushes to clean the streets one inch at a time.  Now we have people trying everything to get a “high” away from reality.  And if what they have out on the streets doesn’t get you high enough, you can get a all-in-one fix that will have you hanging off strangers backs talking like Dora’s backpack. Find a backpack load it up…

  6. im surprised that so many “veteran” police are retiring in bangor…this is like the 4th or 5th one this year…i don’t blame them…bangor has gone to the gutter and i would want out too.

    happy retirement!

  7. Why after all these years of police work is he still only an officer? Why not atleast a sargent or higher?

    1.  Many of those boys like to be street cops. They have no use for politics and don’t want to command a crew. In this case, this was Mr. Jordan’s choice. Anyone that knows him personally knows he is a very, very smart man.

      1. Yeah, he chose to  be a street cop for all those years.  Never sucking up to his peers and taking the low road, a true street cop!!!. And where is his former Chief? who tried to fire him and failed??? Hmmmmmm i did not see a reception posted for Gastia,,,

      1. well after that many years he should have been promoted. Unless for some reason he would get into trouble. Look at Sgt. Edwards  see the Sgt. part he will retire with higher pay.

        1. Average span of control for a Sergeant is 5-7 patrol officers. By your logic all 5-7 officers should be retired as Sergeants when there is only one opening for that position.

  8. There is more. Than one on the force for their whole career tom j that will always be officers butchie moore for one Paul colley for another you got to kiss a lot of you know what to rise this way you just do your job and call it a career

    1. Moore still a cop? Bomb squad maybe but not a real people person. Colley is one good cop. To bad about politics . Was a time when he could clean the streets . 

  9. I met Officer Jordan in early 1990 in an official capacity, but it wasn’t long before I considered him a friend. Steve is the most kind hearted, caring officer I have ever had the pleasure of getting to know. He was a true asset to the City of Bangor. Best of luck in your future, Steve. May all good things come your way !!!

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