Police helicopters an invaluable tool
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I recently read an article in your paper ,which was written and
signed by a Jack Harris, a resident of Huntington Beach, who had
seemingly negative comments about the helicopters the Huntington
Beach Police Department uses for patrol purposes.
I appreciated his information and knowledge of statistics and
enjoyed his comments regarding the cost and alleged waste of money
(millions) the city is involved in as they maintain, not one, but
three of them. The twist to the whole article was, after all he wrote
and as he began to very, very, very slightly make an attempt at an
argument, he overshadowed his point by saying (at the end): “no noisy
helicopters.” If you ask me, that sounds like the real reason he is
so against the Police Department having them.
May I offer some of the benefits of using helicopters, the way I
see it? Not only do they assist patrol officers on the ground, but
they can be anywhere in the city in minutes to assist with calls for
service, most likely to be used during serious crimes-in-progress
and/or felony situations (bank robberies, burglaries, other types of
thefts, domestic violence, sexual assaults etc.) The helicopters can
also help with lower priority calls such as parking problems,
(incomplete) 911 calls from public pay phones on the street, in a
park, in front of businesses and in most cases it allows for the
patrol officers to be able to engage in other forms of important
police work, self-initiated investigations involving criminal acts or
even assisting citizens who are in need. Other reasons their use may
benefit officers, as well as the public of course, is looking for
lost or missing children, maybe a mentally impaired adult who was
reported as a walkaway from a convalescent home, and/or tracking a
Lojack (stolen vehicle) or On-Star activation from a vehicle
(motorist with an emergency).
Now, I’m not suggesting Harris’ statement is unreasonable or wrong
and his visions of nice parks and schools, streets and/or
infrastructure issues, as he compared to the city of Fountain Valley,
are not on my priority list either, but the helicopter program needs
to be fit into the city budget forever! The helicopters, as well as
all civil servant jobs, should be considered as important and high in
priority as those quality of life issues he is suggesting.
In his own words, he desires “little crime.” Well, keep the
helicopters in the air and they will be able to suppress any future
incidences -- or is it merely just about the noise they make?
* JASON SMITH is a Huntington Beach resident. To contribute to
“Sounding Off” e-mail us at [email protected] or fax us at (714)
965-7174.
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