Pubdate: Mon, 27 Sep 2004 Source: Grand Island Independent (NE) Copyright: 2004 Grand Island Independent Contact: http://www.theindependent.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1023 Author: Gretchen Fowler Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) A POSITIVE ROLE MODEL Deputy Is Well-Known, Respected By Area Students When it comes to being a Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) officer, Hall County Sheriff Jerry Watson said, some people have what it takes and some people don't. He sees Sgt. Rich McKinny as one person who definitely has what it takes. "He gets down on his knees and gives hugs and wipes noses if he needs to," Watson said of McKinnny, a longtime DARE officer for Hall County. "It's just really obvious that he cares." McKinny teaches the DARE program to sixth-graders and a shortened version of the program to fourth-graders at Wood River, District 1-R, Alda, Doniphan-Trumbull and Cedar Hollow. He trained to become a DARE officer in 1989 at the Illinois State Patrol Headquarters in Springfield, Mo. He began teaching classes in January of 1990 and, with the exception of one year, has been doing it ever since. "It's got to be a voluntary thing," McKinny said of being a DARE officer. "I enjoy working with the kids and enjoy seeing the kids grow up." Watson said McKinny taught his kids in the DARE program about 15 years ago when Watson was still with the Grand Island Police Department. "He's one of the most compassionate, kind souls that I've ever met," Watson said. "He's really good with the kids, and the kids seem to take to him." When McKinny walked into the gymnasium at Wood River Elementary last school year, he was swarmed by students who rushed to give him hugs and tell him how glad they were to see him. Staff at the school said the kids respect him and view him as a grandfather figure, and Watson said that's the case in most of the schools McKinny frequents. "They respect him, and they look up to him," 1-R Principal Mark Standage said of McKinny, noting that McKinny congratulates the students personally and shakes their hands when they graduate from the program. "It's just a neat relationship they build with him over those few weeks." In addition to teaching the 10-week program to sixth-graders and a five-week program to fourth-graders, McKinny spends time with the kids on the playground and during lunch. He takes part in school activities such as the Wood River Fun Plunge (which required him to dress in shorts and a T-shirt and jump into a cold, mucky river) and said he runs into many kids years later when they've grown up and they remember him. "You get to know them away from the classes and get to know them a little bit better," McKinny said of the students he deals with. His one frustration is that he can't reach every student, and that as a deputy, he sometimes runs into former students who've gone astray. "The busier kids are with activities, the less likely they are to get involved in drugs," McKinny said. "Peer pressure is just so tremendous among kids." In addition to teaching kids about drugs and alcohol, McKinny talks about tobacco use, the importance of school and clubs and treating people right. "It's more about how they treat other kids," McKinny said. "It's all about not putting other people down and working on getting kids to feel good about themselves." When McKinny isn't teaching DARE classes, he's busy with a variety of other tasks as a sergeant with the sheriff's department. Watson said McKinny supervises other deputies, helps with day-to-day activities in the office and does just about anything he's asked to do. "He wears lots of hats," Watson said. "He's so kind-hearted. He's the type of guy who would just give you the shirt off of his back." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek