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$500,000 Grant Will Fund St. Paul Police Community Outreach

Star Tribune

The Saint Paul Police Foundation is appreciative of the generous grant from Otto-Bremer Trust. The Foundation’s work is to preserve and support public safety by marshaling community resources to strengthen the bond between the people of Saint Paul and their police department. With these additional resources the Foundation will be able to further enhance the public-safety and community relations activities of the Department ensuring the Department is an integral part of the fabric of our great community.


 

St. Paul police will use a new half-million-dollar grant to continue and expand community outreach programs.

The $500,0000, two-year grant from the Otto Bremer Trust was awarded to the St. Paul Police Foundation, a nonprofit that supports the department’s work. Half was released last week to the foundation, which has agreed to raise a matching $250,000 in order to receive the other half.

“In my almost 27 years at the St. Paul Police Department, this is the most significant grant for community outreach,” said Assistant Chief Todd Axtell, who helped secure the funding. “Anybody that’s been following national events understands that building trust between the community and police has to be our top priority.”

The department has to apply for the money from the foundation for specific projects, which include programs with the St. Paul Public Schools, St. Paul Parks and Recreation and YWCA of St. Paul, among others.

“We are pleased to provide funding for the critical and important work the Foundation is doing in partnership with the St. Paul Police Department,” Otto Bremer Trust co-CEO and trustee Daniel C. Reardon said in a written statement.

Axtell said he and Reardon began discussing the grant about six months ago. The department has “always struggled” to find enough money to fund outreach programs, Axtell said, while balancing other needs within its budget.

The grant will help the department achieve key goals in outreach to youth from childhood through the early 20s, Axtell said, including: drawing young people into law enforcement work with an emphasis on diversifying St. Paul police’s rank and file, breaking down barriers between officers and youth of color, and helping officers see youth through “a new lens.”

The money will help save the department’s YWCA Junior Police Academy, which was headed toward an uncertain future this year — its 10th anniversary — because of a lack of money. Since its inception, the program has served about 500 youths, 95 percent of them people of color.

It will also help fund things as simple as new basketballs for regular games between St. Paul police and Somali youth and activities such as hockey, fishing and soccer.

“This is all about keeping kids out of the criminal justice system,” Axtell said.

Chao Xiong • 612-270-4708

Twitter: @ChaoStrib

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St. Paul Police Land Sizeable Bremer Grant for Community Outreach Programs

(Pioneer Press)

St. Paul Assistant Police Chief Todd Axtell started a summer program a decade ago to introduce kids in St. Paul to the daily work of being a police officer. On the first day, he asked the several dozen young people ice breaker questions.

“I asked: What do the police do?” Axtell recalled. “And, a little boy raises his hand excitedly, and he says, ‘shoot people.’ ”

Axtell tells the story to explain why he’s excited that the St. Paul Police Department is receiving a $500,000 two-year grant from the Otto Bremer Trust to increase community engagement. The sizable grant, which was announced Thursday, will flow through the nonprofit St. Paul Police Foundation. It’s a rare example of private dollars supporting police work and will allow the department to create new ways for officers to interact with young people as mentors, coaches and community leaders.

“Every positive contact we have with our youth is another deposit in the bank of trust,” said Axtell. “We want our young people to understand there is a person behind the uniform, and that we care about the community. We want our youth to be able to approach our officers without fear. And we want our officers to get to know our youth, so when they’re driving down the street answering a call for service, they can now put a name to the face.”

The grant comes at a time when police and community relations across the country and in the Twin Cities have been strained by high-profile police shootings of unarmed civilians, many of whom are black.

“It was a ripe opportunity,” said Daniel Reardon, one of three CEOs of the Otto Bremer Trust in St. Paul, which in 2014 gave away more than $40 million in grants. “Because of the dollar amount, they’re going to be able to reach a lot more people. You’re going to see police viewed as a resource and an asset rather than a liability.”

The money will bolster existing programs, such as the St. Paul Junior Police Academy, a one-week summer camp run with the YWCA to introduce children and teens to police work through field trips to the finger print lab and visits with the K-9 units. Over nine years, 500 young people have participated, 95 percent African American and other children of color, said Axtell.

The police department started a separate youth academy for East and West African students in 2014. The Bremer grant could be used to pay for transportation and halal meals, which until now the department had scrambled to cover through its regular budget. One of the young women involved the program was hired last year as the department’s first Somali community liaison officer.

“We need to build community wherever we can, given the tensions there have been between the African American community and the police,” said Gaye Adams Massey, who started last year as CEO at YWCA St. Paul. “And this is a great way to build relationships between young people and the officers.”

Until now, the police department has funded outreach through its budget, said Axtell. But that’s becoming harder to do with annual 15 percent increases in 911 calls and the subsequent need for additional policing, he said. One of his dreams is to use the Bremer grant to staff a community engagement team to organize and increase the various outreach programs. The police also facilitate a regular all-female swim night at the downtown YMCA to teach Somali girls and women how to swim.

And, officers work with St. Paul Public School students through the college and career preparation program AVID. Through partnerships with St. Paul Parks and Recreation and nonprofit organizations, officers take kids ice fishing and on summer bicycle rides. They hold baseball and basketball clinics. Funds could pay for buying basketballs or renting time on a soccer field for a weekly cop-coached soccer program, he said.

The department also hopes to raise an additional $250,000 through donations to the St. Paul Police Foundation, Axtell said.

Sgt. Jeff Stiff volunteered for the first time last year along with other St. Paul officers with a free weekly hockey program called Rink Rats, funded through the Herb Brooks Foundation.

“It’s something I enjoyed doing,” said Stiff, a former college hockey player. “And I think it’s an opportunity for these kids to see police officers in a different light.” He developed a friendship with a second-grader named Antonio, whose mother, April Naastad, said Stiff still texts or calls a couple times a week to see how her son is doing.

“Antonio’s dad isn’t around, so it’s basically just me raising him,” Naastad said. “He’s helped Antonio with his school work and attitude. It’s amazing. It helps me out a lot.”

Imagine someone asking Antonio: What does a police officer do? He might just answer “plays hockey.”

May 5, 2016 | UPDATED: 16 hours ago