Local
officer leads first MPO class
February 28, 2011
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Stacy Brown addressing her class at the Idaho Post
Academy. |
On February 4, 15 probation officers from
around the state graduated from the Idaho Peace Officer
Standards and Training (POST) Academy’s first misdemeanor
probation officers training course, a three week program
developed in part by Boundary County Commissioner Ron Smith, who
serves on the state misdemeanor probation committee and training
council.
It was led by Stacy Brown,
Boundary
County’s chief probation officer,
who was elected class president by her classmates.
“I was proud to have attended the
commencement ceremony and watch Stacy graduate with the first
class,” Smith said. “She did so well, she was asked by the
council to be one of the instructors at the next class, and she
agreed. We’re very fortunate to have her in this county, and her
accomplishment says a lot for Boundary
County on the state level. I’m very
proud of her.”
Stacy and her husband bought property in
Boundary
County in 2000 as she was nearing
retirement from a 19-year career with the San Bernadino County,
California, Sheriff’s Office, where she worked as an animal
control officer. They spent every vacation from then on in
Boundary
County, developing their property
and building their home. After her retirement in 2006, the
couple moved here and spent a year finishing their house. When
rural life proved just a little too bucolic, her love for law enforcement prompted her to join the Boundary
County Sheriffs Office as a volunteer dispatcher.
When the position of county juvenile
probation officer opened, she applied and was accepted, a
position she’s held for three years now. On
May 1, 2010, she was promoted to chief probation
officer upon Jackie Bacon’s retirement. Already POST qualified
in juvenile probation, a job she still does, she added the
misdemeanor probation training once it became available to carry
her duties overseeing all functions of her office.
“I’ve always been interested in law
enforcement, and this is another aspect of it,” she said. She
refuses, however, to take sole credit for her accomplishments.
“I’ve never belonged to an organization
that’s so close-knit,” she said. “Everybody has their job to do,
but everybody in the county works together, from the courts to
the prosecutor’s office to the sheriff’s office. We have the
best team I’ve ever seen.”
Despite her long experience, she said the
training in Meridian
was intense.
“It was a very difficult course, but
extremely worthwhile,” she said. “It was excellent training, and
the instructors were fantastic.”
The course was developed over the past
several
years as the Idaho Misdemeanor Probation Committee lobbied the
state legislature on the importance of the work misdemeanor
probation officers do as part of the state criminal justice
system and the need to provide academy level training of the
same caliber required of other law enforcement officers. The
legislature agreed, last year passing law that will require that
misdemeanor probation officers throughout the state attend the
academy.
“Misdemeanor probation is an essential tool
in the criminal justice system to guide misdemeanor offenders
toward becoming law abiding citizens,” Smith said. “I’m glad the
state is now able to provide these officers the training they
need to do the job correctly and safely. More important, I think
it shows that the state values the work these people do. That
one of our own officers did so well in the very first MPO class
offered says a lot for the program we have here, and that she
was selected to become an instructor for the next class says a
lot for the professionalism she brings to her job.”
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