Serve Daily

Finding Joy in ServiceTra­vis

Keel of the Payson Police Department finds motivation by serving others in the community

- Shellie PetersonOf­ficer (Peterson is a Serve Daily contributo­r.)

Travis Keel has worked for the Payson Police Department for two years, but has 15 years of total experience as a police officer under his belt. He and his wife and six children moved to Santaquin from Delta.

Years ago, Keel decided to become a first responder after he was laid off from his constructi­on job and had difficulty finding employ- ment.

He spent six years in the Marines, so becoming a police officer seemed like a natural course of action for his life. It also offered secu- rity and good benefits.

When I asked Keel to relate the most challengin­g thing about being a first re- sponder, he replied without hesitation, “when you can’t fix the problem.”

When there isn’t enough informatio­n or evidence to solve a case, Keel hates it.

He wants to solve every crime he encounters, but sometimes there is nothing more he can do.

On the flipside, when he is able to help someone, it makes everything worth it.

“When you solve a crime and you get people’s proper- ty back or when you solve a puzzle and get to take the bad guy to jail, that’s the rewarding part,” Keel said with conviction.

Keel’s natural optimism and enthusiasm for life recently caught the atten- tion of a Deseret News columnist and contributo­r Arianne Brown.

In early June of last year, she was heading home from a Saturday morning run and was unhappy with her per- formance. She relates that “just as I was about to end my run early, I passed three police cars with officers in them, conversing with one another.” Keel happened to be one of those officers.

Brown related in a Deseret News article how Officer Keel said something during that run that changed her day and perhaps her life. He called out, “you’re winning at life!” as Brown passed by. The comment had a more powerful effect on her than Keel probably realized it would.

Brown related, “In four short words, he protect- ed me from the negative thoughts that were flowing

through my mind, and he served me by being kind.”

It seems a common theme among police officers that they don’t see their efforts as heroic.

After all, it’s all just part of a day’s work. But when Keel said to me, “I haven’t done anything really special,” I wanted to respond that just getting up and suiting

up is special. It signifies a willingnes­s to protect and serve, regardless of the risks involved.

Keel said it best when he stated, “I go about and do little things and I come to realize that every call I get is the most important thing in the world to that person right now, so it needs to be the most important thing in the world to me. If I put my heart and soul into some- thing for somebody and we get the desired outcome, I get big payback from that. And it’s not special. I’m sure most cops do that.” That attitude is exactly why Keel and others like him are genuine heroes in my book.

 ?? Photo by Lacey Keel ?? Officer Travis Keel finds great personal fulfillmen­t in serving others.
Photo by Lacey Keel Officer Travis Keel finds great personal fulfillmen­t in serving others.

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