| Published April 15, 2003 |
Volume 11, Number 4 |
Pleasanton Police Department Implements COPPS Program
Maintaining a relationship with local law enforcement is important to
the safety of people who live, work, and do business in the community,
just as cooperation and communication with the public helps the police
to do their job. To encourage the ideals of neighborhood policing, the
Pleasanton Police Department has implemented a program that it calls Community
Oriented Policing and Problem Solving (COPPS), which centers around building
police-community partnerships to work collectively in problem solving to
address the causes of crime and other community issues.
“We have separated our city into three distinct districts,” says Lieutenant
Eric Finn, District 2 Commander for the Pleasanton Police Department. “In
each district we have defined geographic areas that we call neighborhoods.
What we’ve done is that we actually have officers as a part of our COPPS
initiative that we assign to specific neighborhoods.” Hacienda Business
Park falls into what is called District 2 and is one of its six delineated
neighborhoods.
The idea of the COPPS program is to have officers get involved with
their specific assigned neighborhood, get to know the residents and business
owners in the area, and build a personal relationship that will hopefully
lead to a more peaceful community. The two officers assigned to Hacienda
are Officer John Blanchard and Officer Bob Leong. “Working with the business
community is just as important as working with the residential community,”
Leong says. “We hope to maintain a relationship with everyone in the Hacienda
neighborhood.” Some of the local business owners and residents may already
be familiar with Officer Blanchard. “I grew up in the area, which I think
gives me a good feel for the community-including the businesses and the
people who live here,” Blanchard says.
As noted, the relationship that COPPS seeks goes beyond simply responding
to emergencies. Neither is it a replacement for existing police services.
Blanchard and Leong are quick to point out that any business or resident
with immediate needs for police services should still call 911 in emergencies
or the 24-hour police department number, (925) 931-5600. However, the COPPS
program can be used to help craft solutions to issues before they become
problems. “Some of the business owners have some issues surrounding kids
skateboarding on their property,” Finn says. “This presents a problem,
because it costs them money to make the necessary repairs for the damage
that’s being done. So, this is where officer Blanchard and Officer Leong
can interface with Hacienda businesses and look for solutions. How does
code enforcement play a role in this? How does signage play a role in it?
What are the environmental things that are bringing in kids to that particular
business? That’s a small example of what we’re trying to accomplish.”
To contact Officer John Blanchard and Officer Bob Leong, you can email
them respectively at jblanchard@ci.pleasanton.ca.us
and rleong@ci.pleasanton.ca.us.
You can also call them at the Pleasanton Police Department at 925-931-5100.
Or, even better, stop and say hello to them when they’re on their Hacienda
neighborhood beat.
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