Join Us at the SFPD Bike Rodeo

SFPD Bike Rodeo
The San Francisco Police Department and The San Francisco Police Activities League will be holding its inaugural Motorcycle Training and Skills Exhibition, “Motorcycles For Kids” on August 2nd and August 3rd, 2013. The event will benefit the kids from the San Francisco Police Activities League.  For more information click here

 

Reminder: We Do Not Call!

telephone noDuring our annual mail campaign, donors often ask about our telephone solicitation practices.  Rest assured that San Francisco Police Activities League never solicits money by telephone.  Other organizations with similar sounding names claim to represent SFPAL.  San Francisco Police Activities League never receive a penny from these organizations that solicit by telephone.  Be aware!

Golf Tourney Thursday May 16 — TPC Harding Park

The PAL golf tournament was a huge success this year!  We sold out Harding Park golf course and dinner.  We held a very successful VIP breakfast honoring former Supervisor and PAL kid Sean Elsbernd.  Thanks to all our sponsors and golfers who came out to our tournament this year.

Here are some photos from the event.

And thanks to our 2013 event sponsors:

SFPAL Golf Sponsors

Come Join SFPAL & S.I. Wildcats for our 5-week Spring Conditioning Program

Our conditioning program will help participants of all sports improve their agility, skills, endurance, and confidence. Boys and girls from 7 – 17 of age are welcome to participate. Transportation to St. Ignatius will be provided CYO (for participants only). Bus pick up and drop off will be at Kimbell Field.

When: Friday, April 26th, May 3rd, May 10th, May 17th, and May 24th
Time: 5:30pm-8:30pm
Where: St. Ignatius High School
Bus Pick Up & Drop Off Info: pick up will be at 5:30pm (please arrive 15 min before pick-up time as the bus will leave promptly at 5:30pm) & drop off will be at 8:30pm at Kimbell Field.

If you are interested in participating in our Spring Conditioning Program, please complete THIS FORM and bring with you to Kimbell Field, or fax it to the PAL Office at 415-401-4670. Participants will need this form in order to ride on the bus and participate. Parents are welcomed to attend but must provide own transportation. Parents will not be able to ride on the bus.

If you have any questions about the condition program, please feel free to call the office at 415-401-4729.

PAL to honor new Chief Greg Suhr

San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee will be introducing newly appointed Chief Greg Suhr May 16, 2011 at the Annual PAL Golf Tournament. Our annual golf tournament is PAL’s biggest fundraiser of the year, raising money for vital youth programs, including the PAL Law Enforcement Cadet program.

Chief Suhr was one of the key architects behind the newly-revitalized PAL Law Enforcement Cadet program.  Last year, SFPD and PAL piloted the new Summer Cadet Academy and SFPD Station Internships with 25 youth with the help of Greg Suhr.  In 2011, PAL will double the program with 50 new PAL Summer Academy Cadets for a total of 65+ who will be placed in SFPD internships citywide.

Seahawks Pass, Punt & Kick to Glory!

Congratulations to PAL Seahawks Raman (Pee Wees) and Cedric (Jr. Midgets) who won in their age divisions at the Stanford Spring Red & White Game.  They were were recognized at half-time on April 9th’s game at Kezar Stadium.  Some of the Seahawks were also invited to Stanford’s football camp this summer.

Here are some pictures from Stanford’s website

Profile: Lorraine Woodruff-Long forges new partnership with SFPD, revitalizes Cadet Academy

PAL Executive Director Lorraine Woodruff-Long

Woodruff-Long (second from left, middle row) with first graduating class of cadets.

Woodruff-Long addresses the crowd at 50th Anniversary Dinner in October 2010

Lorraine Woodruff-Long grew up in Texas but hails from a long line of San Franciscans — five generations, to be exact.

Her family dates back to the Gold Rush, when her great-great-great-great grandfather, a Scottish sea captain, made his way across the Atlantic, then 3,000 miles across the country, to California, to pan for gold.

Later, her great-grandmother, Myrtle, became one of the few female doctors to practice medicine in California during the 1906 earthquake.

Woodruff-Long likes to tell the story of how Myrtle narrowly escaped being crushed in the big quake. Asleep at the children’s hospital moments before the 5:12 a.m. tremor, she woke up abruptly and got out of bed. A heartbeat later, the earthquake hit and the wall over her bed collapsed. Had she slept a few minutes longer, she likely would have died — and Woodruff-Long might not be here today.

Thanks to that amazing bit of luck, Woodruff-Long is here, and as new executive director of PAL, has spent the last two years mining its rich history and laying the groundwork for a strong future.

Among the goals she set for the organization: Restore the partnership with the San Francisco Police Department and revitalize the long standing cadet program.

REFOCUSING
When PAL was founded in 1959, all programs were run by police and all but a handful of coaches were cops. Some programs, such as judo, were run out of the Hall of Justice. Kids and police came into much closer contact, and the community was richer for it.

Over the years, the balance shifted, as more civilians took over coaching positions and the SFPD adopted different priorities.

By the time Woodruff-Long joined PAL, “we had lost our historical partnership with the police department,” she says.

Woodruff-Long wanted to reverse that loss. She reached out to several members of the SFPD, including Commander of Investigations David Lazar, who at the time was Ingleside Station captain.

She also enlisted the help of Bayview Station Captain Greg Suhr; Ingleside Station Captain Louis Cassanego, who at the time was head of the Police Academy; and former Mission Station Captain John Goldberg.

Together, they focused on the PAL cadet program. In its heyday, the cadet program served more than 50 kids with a rich assortment of guest speakers, law-enforcement classes, and internships. But over the last decade, it had fallen off the radar of many at SFPD.

Now there was a chance to revive the program, and with it the PAL-SFPD partnership.

“I felt that was really the thing I had to champion,” Woodruff-Long said. “There is a real need for youth to learn substantive job and leadership skills to prepare them for college and career, wherever that leads them. This is a program that helps provide that. Ultimately, I want the best, most educated, most qualified candidates for the Police Department to be coming out of the PAL Cadet program.”

By giving kids a taste of law enforcement as a career, a revitalized cadet program might ultimately help the police department with one of its top priorities—recruiting top-quality applicants. The cadet program would serve as a kind of “farm system,” encouraging young men and women to finish high school, go to college, and pursue a career in law enforcement.

FINISHING THE JOB
Woodruff-Long credits Commander Lazar with the idea of reviving the PAL cadet program. Lazar was a cadet from age 14 to 18 and says the experience was “very special and very meaningful” to him as a young boy.

“I saw the potential for the program and knew that if anybody could get it done, Lorraine could,” he said. “Her energy is amazing … she’s really passionate about her work and she believes strongly in it. It rubs off, they see the results. She’s seen as a person who gets things done.”

Captain Suhr said it was Woodruff-Long’s energy that propelled the idea forward.

“Every time you talk to Lorraine, it’s like she’s had six cups of coffee,” Suhr said. “She’s a finisher. She’s totally a get-here-from-there person who says, ‘I just need somebody to help break the barriers,’ and then she starts banging down the walls, until she can move the wall a little bit.”

For example, he said, while the police originally proposed signing up 20 kids, Woodruff-Long went out and signed up 25 kids.

“She ran with it and did a fabulous job filling the class,” Suhr said. “If it were up to Lorraine, the cadets would outnumber the cops.”

Captain Cassanego said Woodruff-Long inspires many people and added, “She gets the job done. Failure is not an option with her.”

With the help of these police, PAL presented a four-pronged plan to then-Police Chief George Gascón, who enthusiastically endorsed it:

  • • First, create the Summer Cadet Academy program. The intensive four-week program, which was launched last summer, attracted 25 cadets. The kids, who ranged in age from 14 to 19, graduated in July. PAL expects to double enrollment next summer, to 50.
  • • Second, place the graduates in yearlong internships at either the Bayview or Ingleside stations, working alongside police officers and allowing them on ride-alongs.
  • • Third, give cadets community service assignments, such as helping with crowd control at the Chinese New Year parade and the San Francisco Giants World Series parade last fall. Have cadets attend bimonthly meetings of the academy for further training.
  • • Fourth, give cadets the opportunity to participate in events such as the Cadet College Night. Held for the first time in January, this event familiarized cadets with the array of local law-enforcement college programs available. (See related story.) Woodruff-Long enlisted the help of Former Police Chief Tony Ribera, now a teacher at the University of San Francisco. She also hopes to create a small scholarship program aimed at helping PAL cadets get into these college programs.

AWESOME KIDS
So far these efforts have been paying off beautifully. “She’s really taken the program and brought it far beyond my expectations,” Commander Lazar said.

“This is the definition of community police,” Captain Suhr added. Acting Chief Jeff Godown has asked PAL to expand the program to all SFPD stations and bureaus as well.

The parents of cadets, meanwhile, have been reporting that their children are more responsible and have matured in a positive way. Captain Cassanego says the kids get to see the police as “human beings, with a face and personality, just like everyone else.”

“We’ve got these really awesome kids,” Woodruff-Long said. “I get stopped by parents on the street who say this program changed their kid’s life.”

Coaches pick up t-shirts as season starts Saturday

This week we’ve gotten to say “hello” to all our coaches and team managers and they’ve come to pick up their field permits and schedules.  First game of the season is Saturday.  Kick off!

Cadet College Night Shows Path to Law-Enforcement Career

PAL cadets, their families, and speakers at the first annual Cadet College Night.

College Night host, Former Police Chief Tony Ribera, with Jim Conners, Department Chair of the Administrative Justice Program at City College.

The cadets who attended the College Night.

PAL held its first College Night to introduce cadets to local college programs specializing in law enforcement — and by all accounts, it was a big hit.

The event, held on January 13, 2011, focused on programs offered by the University of San Francisco and City College of San Francisco. Both colleges offer degrees in law enforcement leadership and criminal justice.

The night was hosted by Retired San Francisco Chief of Police Tony Ribera, who heads the Business and Professional Studies at USF. Ribera wrote the original curriculum for the school’s law enforcement leadership program.

Ribera described the gathering as “quite a good crowd,” and said about 50 cadets and their parents attended.

“We had very positive feedback — from the kids themselves and very positive from parents,” he said.

Ribera said there is currently a push at the San Francisco Police Department Police to get police cadets to enroll in the local law enforcement programs and thus foster a more highly educated police force.

Traditionally, many police officers skipped college and went right into the department after high school. Ribera said it was not unusual to find police officers in their 30s and 40s attending night school to make up for the college education they missed in their 20s.

But with such a wealth of law enforcement programs in the Bay Area, it makes sense for cadets to take advantage of the higher-education options first, and focus on a job once they have nailed a degree.

Ribera said there has been talk at the SFPD of creating a program similar to ROTC where cadets could go through a four-year program at City College and USF, get a bachelor’s degree, and then have an opportunity in law enforcement.

Dan Lawson, retired SFPD captain, now executive director/chief of USF police, told cadets there are three things they need to know:  how to be a critical thinker, how to create positive relationships, and how to work collaboratively. Lawson is a former cadet and talked about how education helped him in his work.

Other speakers included SFPD Commander David Lazar, Captain Louis Cassanego (Ingleside station), Jim Connors, director of administration of justice for City College, and Carol Taylor, associate director of advising and outreach at USF.

Former PAL Cadet Captain Lizzie Perez found the event useful and inspirational. “I took that in, when I was there and listening to them, a light bulb went off.  That’s what I need to do to get into USF and hopefully eventually the SFPD.  I’ve already contacted a City College counselor.”

Said Perez, “I didn’t know what my options were before.  Now I know what I need do.”

PAL Executive Director Lorraine Woodruff-Long said the cadets received good advice not only on the importance of college before a career in law enforcement, but also on the importance of ongoing education.

The City College and USF program have been running for many years, but Ribera said cadets are not always aware of them. The College Night is one way to increase awareness.

PAL hopes to make the College Night an annual event.