From Childhood Picture to Real-life Cop
Criminal Justice

From Childhood Picture to Real-life Cop

 

UCC Police Reserve Academy graduate demonstrates the right qualities to be successful in law enforcement.

ROSEBURG, Oregon – We all keep mementos from our childhood—photographs, stuffed animals, crayon-colored pages or drawings. Roseburg Police Officer Austin Kennedy is no different. He’s had a drawing of a police officer tucked away since second grade.

“That drawing was always me,” he said. “I always wanted to be a cop and now I’m living the dream.”

Austin didn’t have to wait long for his dream to become real. He graduated from the Police Reserve Academy (PRA) at Umpqua Community College (UCC) last spring. The Roseburg Police Department hired him shortly after.

At the academy, Austin learned from the best. Most of the staff also teach at the state academy, so they have a leg up once they get hired.

“So much of what they cover at the Oregon academy, they’ve already learned at the PRA, so they usually breeze through,” Sgt. Gary Klopfenstein, from the Roseburg Police Department, said. “Since they’ve already worked on components of the Oregon Physical Agility Test, graduates are ready—both mentally and physically—to be officers around the state. That’s why I trust the applicants cops send me from the PRA.”

Completing the program is not easy. It’s a nine-month commitment that involves every Saturday. In many cases, students attend UCC full time during the week to back up their PRA training with a two-year degree in Criminal Justice. Commitment can be spotted a mile away.

“We get applicants in Roseburg who come in and think they want to be a police officer—even former military—but we just don’t see a commitment,” Sgt. Klopfenstein said. “Instructors keep an eye out for those we might like to hire. We trust each other to spot someone who has the skills, smarts, talent, and commitment to make it in law enforcement. We saw that in Austin.”

Sgt. Klopfenstein

Seeing the commitment and the drive to succeed, Sgt. Klopfenstein made Austin a part of the Roseburg Police force. Austin isn’t just living his dream, he’s now the man in his second grade police drawing. And as it turns out, Austin isn’t the only one with a drawing to look back on. Sgt. Klopfenstein has a drawing similar to Austin’s from sixth grade.

“I could have been a farmer,” he said. “That’s what my family did. But in 1999, I got married and got a police job. I’ve never looked back.”

About Umpqua Community College

Nestled in the beautiful North Umpqua River Valley, Umpqua Community College is the regional center for higher education in Douglas County, Oregon. UCC provides high quality college degree programs, workforce development, and community learning opportunities.

Contact

Lt. Kelley Bean
Coordinator, Police Reserve Academy
Phone: 541-440-4668

Keith Yori
Program Coordinator, Criminal Justice
Phone: 541-440-7710