Carol McDonald
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June Casagrande
The Newport Beach Police Department has a secret weapon. And if
other police agencies aren’t jealous, they should be.
Carol McDonald is every police department’s dream: a volunteer who
can do just about anything, and who really wants to, from playing
Mrs. Claus on helicopter school tours to stocking police cruisers
with flares and herding animals for the city’s “Pick A Pet” program.
“She’s incredibly giving,” Newport Beach Police Sgt. Steve Shulman
said, adding that McDonald racks up nearly 300 hours a year
volunteering for the department.
McDonald, a retired Newport Beach resident, was the second person
to graduate from the city’s 3-year-old Citizens Police Academy. The
program matches volunteers with tasks in civilian law enforcement.
And for McDonald, this meant a lot of opportunities to have a lot of
fun.
“This is probably the most fun thing I’ve ever done,” McDonald
said. “Sometimes, I just can’t wait to get there in the morning.”
In her three years as a volunteer, McDonald has continued to add
to her resume of valuable skills and experience that she shares with
the Police Department for free. She is a tour guide for groups
visiting the Police Department headquarters, she works with the Drug
Abuse Resistance Education program, she takes part in citizen
patrols, she plays Mrs. Claus on the helicopter that carries her and
Santa to all Newport-Mesa Unified schools each year -- she even does
a little cleaning of the police cars while she’s in there stocking
supplies.
“You never know what you’re going to see when you open the trunk
of one of those cars,” she said, adding that her discoveries are
never anything more incriminating than the occasional stale French
fry.
McDonald, a retired teacher in the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District and in other West Coast schools, said she found the
volunteer work after working on her own Neighborhood Watch program
for 17 years. When the Police Department announced its citizens
academy, McDonald was quick to sign up.
“It was a pretty natural transition from what I was doing,” she
said.
It’s not for everyone, she said, but for people who like police
work, it’s a great way to put your talents to use.
“Not everybody can enjoy what we do,” she said, “but for people
like me, it’s just a great gig.”
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