
Connie Patrick, director of FLETC
FLETC ARTESIA AND COMMUNITY VISITED BY DIRECTOR FROM FEDERAL LAW
ENFORCEMENT TRAINING CENTER IN GLYNCO, GEORGIA
by Jan Wiggins,
freelance writer
Connie Patrick, director of the Federal Law Enforcement Training
Center, and Ray Havens, assistant director, presented a united front before a
packed crowd at the Artesia Wool Bowl on Wednesday, September 11, in remembrance
of the first anniversary of the American terrorist tragedy in New York,
Washington DC and Pennsylvania.
She commended Artesia residents for their friendly community
spirit and show of patriotism.
She said she is proud of FLETC's role in the protection of
the country and envisions the center as an important leader in the protection of
America. Patrick became the fifth director of FLETC, and the first woman to hold
the post, on July 29, 2002.
The future of FLETC in Artesia looks very good, she added,
as the law enforcement training classes are expected to double in all agencies.
The estimated number of students trained this year has increased to 37,000 --
12,000 above 2001, with a projected number of 56,000 expected next
year.
"This is what (the terrorist actions) of 9/11 have done," she
said. "FLETC has become a key asset in terms of requisite training agencies who
protect our borders and help Homeland Security accomplish its mission."
In addition to the training of Federal Air Marshals, the FLETC
will add pilot and Secret Service training programs, as well as the continued
training of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and 12 other basic programs. The other
agencies include Border Patrol, the Immigration Service, Transportation Safety
Administration, Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms, Department of Energy, and state
and local training programs.
Although numbers are classified, Patrick said thousands of
Federal Air Marshals who were trained at FLETC (Artesia) are flying the skies
today protecting our nation.
"Training is the glue or cohesive tool or mechanism that
implements the policy of nine law enforcement agencies currently being trained
at FLETC," she said. Agencies who participate at the center receive instruction
in a variety of trainings including driver training, firearms, classroom,
behavioral science, security, interviewing and reporting.
Patrick also announced the selection of G. Ray Havens, former
assistant director of FLETC in Artesia, to oversee the operations of the
training centers in Glynco, Georgia, Cheltenham, Maryland and Artesia. Woody
Wright, chief administrator of FLETC for the past 14 years, and former Artesia
policeman, will serve as the acting assistant director of the Artesia
center.
FLETC also operates facilities on behalf of the Department of
the Treasury for the International Law Enforcement Academy at Gabarone, Botswana
and U.S. Border Patrol training at Charleston, South Carolina, operating with an
annual budget of $200 million.
Patrick is married to John Patrick, Jr., an attorney and retired
lieutenant colonel with the Georgia Air National Guard, commander of the 224th
Communications Unit in Brunswick, Georgia. They have four children.
She began her law enforcement career in 1976 as a deputy with
the Brevard County Sheriff's Office. She was a Special Agent and supervisor with
the FDLE and became the assistant in charge of the Tampa Regional Operations
Bureau. She is a graduate in criminal justice from the University of Central
Florida and the FBI National Academy in Quantico, Virginia, the Florida Criminal
Justice Executive Institute and the Federal Executive Institute, and is very
active in many state and local boards and councils.
In March 1996, Patrick joined the FLETC as director of general
training. She directed the faculty and staff in the development and management
of programs in support of basic, advanced and specialized law enforcement
training. She was designated the assistant director in 1998, serving in
administrative function, budget and finance, personnel procurement, property
management, facilities management, information systems, security and internal
audit.
The director said she welcomes FLETC's proposed move from the
Department of the Treasury to the Department of Homeland Security.
"Approximately 70% of our workload projections are for bureaus which have been
identified as those proposed to go to Homeland Security," she said. "Regardless
of its organizational placement, FLETC anticipates substantial increases in
training requirements in the next several years."
Currently, FLETC is a bureau of the Department of the Treasury,
which assumed lead agency status for the government when consolidated law
enforcement training was first established in 1970. The president's Homeland
Security Department proposal consists of nine agencies with law
enforcement/security functions. All nine -- Immigration and Transportation
Security Administration, U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Customs Service, U.S. Secret
Service and GSA Federal Protective Services -- are participants in FLETC's
training.