Flying high
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Deirdre Newman
Former Police Chief Dave Snowden was back in town and flying high on
Tuesday for the formal dedication of a new police helicopter in his
name.
The Airborne Law Enforcement program dedicated its newest
helicopter, a Eurocopter EC 120B, to Snowden on the landing pad of
the police station. The program is a joint effort between Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa.
Snowden was instrumental in getting the program started, Newport
Beach Police Chief Bob McDonell said.
“Somebody had to start the ball rolling, and that was Dave,”
McDonell said. “Today, we recognize Dave for being the catalyst that
brought it together.”
Snowden said he was moved to be back in the city he had served for
16 years.
“This place is home to me -- it always will be,” Snowden said. “My
heart’s in Costa Mesa. This is an honor beyond words. It’s hard to
explain what it means to me.”
During his first week as police chief, Snowden said, he discussed
with City Manager Allan Roeder how to make the helicopter program
more effective.
“A lot of cities were operating their own programs with separate
aircrafts,” Snowden said. “I thought if we combined them, we could
share the costs and increase the coverage.”
Snowden credited Roeder, Lt. Bob Oakley and former Police Capt.
Dave Brooks for their help in getting the program off the ground.
When the Airborne Law Enforcement program started, it included
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Huntington Beach and the Orange County
Sheriff’s Department. Huntington Beach and the sheriff’s department
didn’t stay with the program, leaving Newport Beach and Costa Mesa to
share three helicopters.
The helicopters are valuable because they usually arrive first at
an accident scene, they can hover over areas that ground officers
can’t get to, and they have the ability to observe things without
being noticed with infrared technology, said Brooks, who is now a
member of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board of Trustees.
Snowden had the foresight to make sure these advantages were
available to the Newport-Mesa area, Brooks added.
“He’s very deserving,” Brooks said of Snowden. “Without his
support and guidance and encouragement, this never would have
happened.”
The helicopters also work closely with the fire departments, Costa
Mesa Fire Chief Jim Ellis said.
And they are remarkably quiet, which meshes with the police
department’s goal of reducing noise, Oakley said.
By working together, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach are able to
enjoy the financial benefit of replacing the aviation equipment more
regularly “instead of flying them till their blades fall off,” Oakley
said.
The new helicopter cost about $1.23 million.
“Historically, neither city had a provision for replacing them as
they aged,” Oakley said. “Our replacement [policy] provides for a new
one every nine and a half years.”
After the dedication ceremony, attendees checked out the blue
helicopter with an eagle on its tail.
Traci Blanton, a property evidence specialist with the police
department, helped her 2-year-old daughter, Rachel, sit in the
pilot’s seat, gently telling her not to touch the controls. But
Rachel couldn’t resist, and reached to grasp the steering control
handle.
“I want to be able to fly,” Rachel said after she was lifted out
of the helicopter.
Blanton, who flew in the helicopters when she was working with the
crime scene investigation team, said they are an integral part of the
department.
“[They’re] such an important part that really helps us out,”
Blanton said. “Once you’ve been flying in it, it’s amazing. There’s
nothing like it.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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