Pubdate: Wed, 17 Mar 2010 Source: Barrie Examiner (CN ON) Copyright: 2010, Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com/feedback1/LetterToEditor.aspx Website: http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2317 Page: 3 Author: Ian McInroy POLICE, ROTARY SHARE VISION Provincial police and Rotary Club members have more in common than you might think. OPP Deputy Commissioner Chris Lewis said as much during a speech to Rotary Club of Barrie-Huronia members at their weekly meeting, Tuesday. Lewis said OPP officers and Rotary members have similar views of the world. "We both value dedication and commitment. We both work to make other people's lives better and safer," he said, adding that Rotarians perform service "not for themselves, but for others. The OPP wants to hire people who also want to give back to the community." Lewis thanked the club members for their "selfless contributions" to the community. "We (Rotarians and the police) can't forget the people who are out there struggling and we have to help them," he said. "You'll be remembered for how you treat people, not for the expertise you gather over time." He said the OPP has a strong presence in the community. "There are 1,100 of us up the road in Orillia and a lot of people right in the Barrie area," said Lewis, who lives in the Craighurst area and is a friend of Barrie Police Chief Wayne Frechette, who used to work for the OPP. Lewis is a member of the campaign cabinet for the United Way of Greater Simcoe County and chairs the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police Law Enforcement Torch Run for Special Olympics committee. Lewis, who has more than 31 years of policing experience with the OPP, presently oversees the operational activities of five OPP regions, as well as the Aboriginal Policing Bureau and about 4,500 personnel. He spoke of the changes in society the force has witnessed since its creation in 1909. "My first posting was in Kapuskasing and I never thought I'd see things like (marijuana) grow-ops," he said. OPP Commissioner Julian Fantino has taken on highway traffic safety "in a big way" and the changes are apparent, Lewis said. "We're saving lives and reducing the number of people being injured and killed, and reducing the grief of families," he said. "Fatalities are down, impaired driving charges are down, again, and we are looking harder for impaired drivers than we ever have." Lewis said a lot of gangs and members of organized crime are moving into new areas and not just the cities. "The problem is everywhere, including rural Ontario. Organized crime affects us all," he said, adding that Canada is known for growing some of the most potent marijuana in the world. "Most of it is exported to the U.S. and comes back (in return) as cocaine or guns," he said. Barrie-Huronia Rotary members made a contribution in Lewis' name to Rotary's commitment of eradicating polio around the world. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart