Hearing on restoring trooper program is March 10

KENT — A public hearing to discuss the possibility of the town restoring the resident trooper program will be held on Wednesday, March 10, at 8 p.m. at Town Hall.

The hearing will follow a special town meeting to discuss approving a state Small Town Economic Assistance Program (STEAP) grant for the Community House.

Last year, the town eliminated the resident state trooper program during budget talks. The cut saved the town $100,260.

This year, resident and former resident trooper Andy Ocif started a petition asking the town to reinstate the program.

Ocif said his petition has 184 signatures. He presented it to the town clerk on Thursday, Feb. 25.

“Me and a few residents originally wanted to call a special town meeting on this, but we got turned down by the town attorney [Jeff Sienkiewicz],� Ocif said. “He told me that for a special town meeting to be held on this, funding for the resident trooper program has to be put back into the budget first. He suggested that we put out a petition instead.�

At a Board of Selectmen’s meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 2, First Selectman Bruce Adams said the town will not include a line item in the 2010-11 fiscal budget for the resident state trooper program.

“We certainly have to listen to residents of the town, that’s what I promoted during my election campaign,� Adams said about Ocif’s petition. “If a substantial amount of people signed it, then I would have to listen. However, it’s not up to me to reinstate the program. It is up to the selectmen. We will certainly discuss it and definitely not ignore it.�

Adams said he does not feel the town needs to reinstate the program.

“We have been without it for a year and residents seem to be satisfied with our coverage from the state police,� Adams said. “Someday we will think about reinstating the program, but that time is not now. But I will listen to whoever wants to discuss it.�

Ocif, however, disagreed with Adams and said he strongly believes the town needs a resident trooper.

“We’re getting good coverage from the state police, but as a former resident trooper from 1968 to 1975, most of the town’s criminal investigations came to me,� Ocif said. “I was subject to calls day and night, and I had to deal with a lot of middle of the night calls at home. Back then, no one from the barracks came down to town if they didn’t have to. I lived in town and cared about the town.�

Ocif said there is also an issue of continuity with state troopers.

“A few days ago, I was trying to fill in a state trooper about a case because the other trooper handling the case did not pass the information along to him,� he said. “Information is not passed on from one trooper to the other, that’s why there’s no continuity.�

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