Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jul 2006 Source: Daily American (Somerset, PA) Copyright: 2006 The Daily American Contact: http://www.dailyamerican.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4055 Author: Dan DiPaolo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) CONEMAUGH TOWNSHIP POLICE CHIEF EYES REGIONAL DEPARTMENT CONEMAUGH TOWNSHIP - Police Chief Howard Jackson says that rural communities pose unique challenges to local departments as the ever-increasing cost of providing service threatens to outstrip what a tax base can afford for police. "You have to think of expansion. The larger the department, the more services you can provide," Jackson says from the newly remodeled interview room of the township police department. Jackson, an earnest-looking officer with black wire rimmed glasses and thinning black hair, looks more like an academic than a chief of police. With Quemahoning Township supervisors scheduled to approve the purchase of local police service Monday night, Jackson sat down to talk about how a department like his provides effective police coverage for local communities and how expansion is key to making home-grown systems work. Currently the Conemaugh Township police department provides service in Conemaugh Township, Quemahoning Township and Benson Borough. The force patrols more than 41 square miles of township roads and serves more than 7,450 people, he says. Benson brings another 194 people and less than 0.4 square miles to the patrol. Quemahoning Township adds more than 36 square miles and 2,180 people into the system. Of course, the new contract will only bring 40 hours a week of patrolling to Quemahoning Township, he says. "It's a start, and a step towards neighboring communities like Stoystown and perhaps Jenner Township," he says. The goal is to have a large enough area to establish separate zones for stationing patrol cars. Having separate patrol zones would allow police to spend more time on duty in a particular neighborhood and meeting the people they serve rather than traveling from call to call, he says. Ultimately, police would be available to meet residents for interviews in places like the Quemahoning Township building and Stoystown Fire Hall, he says. "You get to know people better. Community policing really works," he says. "Before, you just had someone (a criminal) jump over to the next place and start all over again. With a larger area, we get to know them." He employs seven full-time and six part-time officers, many of them living in the areas they serve. Having the additional 428 people of Stoystown in the system would allow them to arrange coverage for that area 24-hours a day, he says. When Jackson talks about expansion, it's not just the number of people in the service area and the geographical size of the patrols. "I really want to get the DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program into schools," he says. An increase in drug use by children and young adults is the single biggest problem in the county, he says. Education is one of the most effective ways to keep kids from using drugs because societal changes have made it easier for them to get drugs, he says. Alcohol is harder to get than some drugs and more parents are working longer hours, unable to spend as much time with their children, he says. The fact that drugs are harder and more pure than they were even a few years ago makes addiction quicker and harder to break, he says. If a drug education and awareness program were to be instituted in the next year, it would require getting an officer certified and trained. The DARE program is one of the few where grant money is easy to find and acquire. Some of the more traditional sources for police grants have seen cuts in their fund availability, he says. "The money's still out there, you just have find it," he says. Recent grants from U.S. Rep. John Murtha's office have helped the department buy some of the equipment the $520,000 available in the annual police budget can't. "But you can never count on grants. That's why you have to expand," he says. And expanding will likely include adding awareness programs designed to help older residents deal with things like telephone scams and construction cons. A canine unit would also be a nice addition to the force in the future, he says. The hard part of taking on a canine unit is finding an officer willing to be the handler. "It takes a serious commitment. You have to be with the animal all day, every day. Not a lot of people have that kind of time," he says. For now, the department relies on working with units from nearby areas, like Paint Township. Those relationships with neighboring police forces are almost as important as expanding, he says. "People need the service, no matter who's providing it. It comes down to intelligence and sharing intelligence," he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek