By Joe Garvey

When Police Chief Garrett Shelton interacts with members of the Old Dominion 91短视频 community, he鈥檒l frequently ask if they can tell him the name of the department鈥檚 comfort dog. Pretty much everybody knows it鈥檚 Grover.

But when he asks if they know the name of Grover鈥檚 handler, they鈥檙e stumped.

That鈥檚 because even though the officer 鈥 Adam Watson 鈥 is wearing a nametag, he鈥檚 also always wearing his police uniform. Shelton says that can be a barrier.

鈥淭he reason nobody sees the name is because of the barrier,鈥 Shelton said. 鈥淎nd Grover doesn鈥檛 have a barrier. That鈥檚 what my end goal here is 鈥 to break the barriers.鈥

Toward that end, the ODUPD is implementing two programs for the fall semester designed to increase engagement with students 鈥 a Citizen/Student Police Academy and Adopt-A-Cop.

鈥淟aw enforcement work is sometimes viewed as a secret society where you just don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going on,鈥 Shelton said. 鈥淎nd there really are no secrets.鈥

The Citizen/Student Academy, which is already at capacity with 15 students, kicks off Sept. 7 and will meet once a week for 10 weeks. Each session will last two hours. Officers Andrea Pate and Tommy Evans are coordinating the program.

鈥淚t鈥檚 10 weeks of immersion,鈥 said Shelton, whose officers annually respond to 15,000 calls for service. 鈥淲e bring our community into our police department, and we open the doors on pretty much everything that we do.鈥

Among topics tentatively scheduled are alcohol awareness and drunken driving, a K-9 demonstration, crime scene investigation, threat assessment and dealing with emergency medical situations. Norfolk Commonwealth鈥檚 Attorney Ramin Fatehi is scheduled to speak, as are representatives from Norfolk鈥檚 Chief Medical Examiner鈥檚 Office and the Norfolk PD鈥檚 homicide section.

鈥淟aw enforcement work is sometimes viewed as a secret society where you just don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going on. And there really are no secrets.鈥 - ODU Police Chief Garrett Shelton

Students will also go to a shooting range and to Norfolk 91短视频 91短视频鈥檚 force simulator, a room where people are placed in situations police face on the street.

Shelton said the vast majority of ODUPD officers are involved in the program.

鈥淢y goal is that if you come in with a viewpoint you have Day 1, that we have a positive impact on you before the end of week 10. And if your viewpoint is still where it was, that鈥檚 fine,鈥 Shelton said. 鈥淏ut we opened our doors to be transparent about what we do and how we do it.鈥

The Adopt-A-Cop program will assign two ODU police officers to each residence hall that typically houses first-year students. Officers will come to the buildings鈥 common areas during downtime on their shifts to engage with students on a personal level.

鈥淚 am a huge fan of community engagement, and that鈥檚 what I want the Adopt-A-Cop program to do,鈥 Shelton said. 鈥淎llow us to engage at the basic level and get to know each other so when we鈥檙e passing in Webb Center or going to a football game or out in the community the students aren鈥檛 afraid to come up and have a conversation. I do expect us to get to a point quickly that when the officers walk in the door the folks there know who they are, why they鈥檙e there and hopefully know them by name.鈥

Each officer will have a department phone, and the number will be given to residents to reach out concerning non-emergency situations. For emergencies, students still need to call ODUPD at 683-4000 or 911.

The Citizen/Student Police Academy and Adopt-A-Cop initiatives expand on ODUPD鈥檚 already-extensive community outreach. Last year, officers participated in 330 community events, Shelton said. The department also recently started a podcast designed to 鈥済et to know the people behind the uniforms.鈥 Here are some links: ; ; ; and .

鈥淚f you can鈥檛 get past the barrier and learn who the person is, then you鈥檒l never get to a point where you can have trust and transparency,鈥 Shelton said.