The Signal

SCV Sheriff’s Station officials talk crime, how to join efforts

Business leaders learn how to keep the community safe

- By Tammy Murga Signal Staff Writer

About 100 local business leaders gathered Tuesday to learn how they can partner with law enforcemen­t to help keep the community safe by being their “eyes and ears,” as Santa Clarita Valley Sheriff’s Station Capt. Robert Lewis put it.

“I have 179 deputies to support close to 300,000 residents. We cannot do it alone,” he said during the Valley Industry Associatio­n’s October Luncheon, held at the Hyatt Regency Valencia. “If you don’t engage (the community) to be visible out there for us, for our kids — we will lose the fight.”

Lewis and other officials with the SCV Sheriff’s Station, including Lt. John Lecrivain and J-Team Interventi­on Specialist Travis Sabadin, shared some of the challenges facing parents and children with drug use, how businesses can protect themselves from crime and a constructi­on update on the new SCV Sheriff’s Station.

When it comes to vaping among youth, J-Team Detective Bill Velek said the issue is not an SCV epidemic, but rather, “We have the same epidemic that the rest of the country has.” He and his team shared that they are addressing teen drug use with “education, interventi­on and enforcemen­t.”

“If our parents don’t have the informatio­n about what our kids are really exposed to, they can’t properly parent our children,” he said.

“Our big piece is teach the parents, teach the adults in our community so they can then teach the children.”

The station is working on improving and growing its interventi­on team by adding at least one more team member, Lewis said. Aside from the safety of children, businesses can help reduce crime by informing law enforcemen­t of crimes or suspicious activity in a timely manner, said Lewis.

“If we don’t create a safe community for Santa Clarita, no one is going to want to ... come up to your businesses, no one is going to want to buy homes here because it’s not a safe place,” he said. “Please be engaged in what we do in law enforcemen­t, be part to let us know what’s happening and then be our voice out there to know what we’re doing right, wrong.”

“If we don’t create a safe community for Santa Clarita, no one is going to want to ... come up to your businesses, no one is going to want to buy homes here because it’s not a safe place.” Robert Lewis,

SCV Sheriff’s Station captain

Lecrivain, who showed a virtual tour of the new sheriff’s station, said constructi­on is on schedule for the slated completion date of April 2021.

 ?? Dan Watson/The Signal ?? SCV Sheriff’s Foundation Board President-elect Gloria Mercado-Fortine and her husband, Bruce Fortine, look on as narcotics detection dog Jack searches for the scent of drugs in the audience during the Valley Industry Associatio­n’s October luncheon, which was held at the Hyatt Regency Valencia on Tuesday.
Dan Watson/The Signal SCV Sheriff’s Foundation Board President-elect Gloria Mercado-Fortine and her husband, Bruce Fortine, look on as narcotics detection dog Jack searches for the scent of drugs in the audience during the Valley Industry Associatio­n’s October luncheon, which was held at the Hyatt Regency Valencia on Tuesday.
 ?? Cory Rubin/The Signal ?? Santa Clarita Valley Sheriff’s Station Lt. John Lecrivain shows a video on the new SCV Sheriff’s Station during the Valley Industry Associatio­n’s October luncheon, held at the Hyatt Regency Valencia on Tuesday.
Cory Rubin/The Signal Santa Clarita Valley Sheriff’s Station Lt. John Lecrivain shows a video on the new SCV Sheriff’s Station during the Valley Industry Associatio­n’s October luncheon, held at the Hyatt Regency Valencia on Tuesday.

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