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Grant money gives big boost to Sheriff’s Office

Digital fingerprint systems have been in use for a decade or more, but not in Union County, Rasmussen said. “We’re one of the few counties in Oregon left that didn’t have that system,” Rasmussen said. Before the new system went online, jail staff had to take fingerprints the old-fashioned, “ink and roll” way. Fingerprint cards were then sent off to Oregon State Police Identification Services, and the Integrated Automated Fingerprint System maintained by the FBI. Getting a reply took hours, sometimes days. The new system cuts down the wait time dramatically, according UCSO Administrative Assistant Cathie Falck. She recalled one recent case in which a fingerprint match came back in 45 minutes. Falck said the new system is a long-overdue but welcome addition for the Sheriff’s Office. “It’s pretty much the latest and the greatest. It brings us right into the 21st century,” she said. Falck said the system will be used for booking and matching, but not for people applying at the correctional facility’s front counter for concealed weapons permits. Those applicants will have their prints taken the old-fashioned way. The fingerprint unit isn’t the only technology recently added through grant funding, Rasmussen noted. Another, smaller Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant divided between the Sheriff’s Office and the La Grande Police Department will enable the sheriff’s office to buy video microphones for patrol deputies. The technology incorporates a small video camera into a deputy’s handheld radio, Rasmussen said. “The deputy can tape crime scenes, traffic stops and other job-related functions at the touch of a button,” Rasmussen said. In other recent developments, the sheriff’s office completed a partial remodel of the 36-bed jail, adding two isolation cells for inmates with mental health or disciplinary problems. Not counting an isolation cell in the jail’s maximum security unit, there is now a total of four isolation cells. Previously, only two were available. Often, a cell set aside for intoxicated people was pressed into service as an isolation cell. “We renovated an existing jail cell into a true isolation cell, and we also built a new one,” Rasmussen said. “Before, we had problems housing certain kinds of inmates.” Earlier this year, the Union County Board of Commissioners allocated $25,000 from the county contingency fund to help with the remodel and an upgrade of the jail’s surveillance camera system. The balance of the bill came out of the sheriff’s office budget. Rasmussen said the board’s support has been vital to law enforcement efforts. “I think it’s important to recognize what they’ve done,” he said. “It’s really made our job easier.” On a related law enforcement note, the U.S. Office on Violence Against Women recently renewed the county’s Rural Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault and Stalking Assistance Program Grant. The two-year grant renewal brings $348,500 into the Union County Assistance Program, a collaborative effort of the sheriff’s office, Union County District Attorney’s Office, the county Victim’s Assistance Program, Community Corrections and Shelter from The Storm. The original two-year grant provided funding to expand services to victims. With the new grant, the program will maintain the current level of services and expand outreach and education efforts. Rasmussen said Falck deserves much of the credit for the recent surge in grant funding. She wrote the Rural Law Enforcement Assistance Grant, and, as coordinator of the Union County Assistance Program, made sure all the requirements of the Rural Domestic Violence grant were met. She worked with the OSP to bring the digital fingerprint unit to the jail and also assisted with the police department’s Edward Byrne grant. “Her work in the grant writing arena and coordination of grant funding has been crucial,” Rasmussen said. “I greatly appreciate the work she has done for the sheriff’s office on behalf of the citizens of Union County.” - The Observer/BILL RAUTENSTRAUCH
The Union County Sheriff’s Office is a stronger, more efficient operation these days, thanks to federal and state grant funding plus financial support from the county board of commissioners.

Biggest news of all: the sheriff’s office recently received a two-year, $309,000 grant from the federal government to add personnel to the Multi-Agency Enforcement Response Interdiction Team, the drug task force known as MERIT.

Sheriff Boyd Rasmussen said the two-year Recovery Act Rural Law Enforcement Assistance Grant will be used to add two members to the team, one in Union County and another in Wallowa County.
“We’re in the process of hiring right now,” the sheriff said.
Currently, MERIT is staffed with one La Grande police officer, one part-time LGPD sergeant-supervisor and a sheriff’s deputy. Rasmussen said the added manpower in Union and Wallowa counties should have a significant impact on drug crime.
“We’ll be working more with Wallowa County and expanding investigations so they overlap. There’s a lot of drug activity in the Tollgate area in north Union County that affects Wallowa County,” he said.
He said experienced deputies may be moved to the MERIT team from patrol duties, with new hires taking their place on the patrol side. On the other hand, if a person with appropriate investigative experience applies, he or she could be hired directly for MERIT.
“It depends on the applicants we get,” Rasmussen said.
Wallowa County Sheriff Fred Steen said a stronger multi-agency team will go a long way toward solving local drug
problems.
“We get a lot of spillover (of drug crime) from Umatilla and Union counties,” he said. “This will increase our ability to target drug crime and related street crime,” he said.
Rasmussen’s office, which operates the Union County Correctional Facility, also received grant funds from the state this fall to upgrade fingerprinting equipment.
A new, LiveScan digital fingerprinting system has been set up in the jail with money from an Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant.
The $45,000 system ties in with state and federal agencies, including the Oregon State Police and the Automated Fingerprint Identification System maintained by the FBI.

Digital fingerprint systems have been in use for a decade or more, but not in Union County, Rasmussen said.
“We’re one of the few counties in Oregon left that didn’t have that system,” Rasmussen said.
Before the new system went online, jail staff had to take fingerprints the old-fashioned, “ink and roll” way.

A SAFER JAIL: Union County Sheriff Boyd Rasmussen displays one of the isolation cells constructed recently at the Union County Jail. The cells are typically used used to safely house inmates with mental health issues or disciplinary problems. The Union County Board of Commissioners voted this year to allocate $25,000 for jail upgrades. - Observer photos/BILL RAUTENSTRAUCH
Fingerprint cards were then sent off to Oregon State Police Identification Services, and the Integrated Automated Fingerprint System maintained by the FBI. Getting a reply took hours, sometimes days.
The new system cuts down the wait time dramatically, according UCSO Administrative Assistant Cathie Falck. She recalled one recent case in which a fingerprint match came back in 45 minutes.
Falck said the new system is a long-overdue but welcome addition for the Sheriff’s Office.
“It’s pretty much the latest and the greatest. It brings us right into the 21st century,” she said.
Falck said the system will be used for booking and matching, but not for people applying at the correctional facility’s front counter for concealed weapons permits. Those applicants will have their prints taken the old-fashioned way.
The fingerprint unit isn’t the only technology recently added through grant funding, Rasmussen noted.
Another, smaller Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant divided between the Sheriff’s Office and the La Grande Police Department will enable the sheriff’s office to buy video microphones for patrol deputies.
The technology incorporates a small video camera into a deputy’s handheld radio, Rasmussen said.
“The deputy can tape crime scenes, traffic stops and other job-related functions at the touch of a button,” Rasmussen said.
In other recent developments, the sheriff’s office completed a partial remodel of the 36-bed jail, adding two isolation cells for inmates with mental health or disciplinary problems.
Not counting an isolation cell in the jail’s maximum security unit, there is now a total of four isolation cells. Previously, only two were available. Often, a cell set aside for intoxicated people was pressed into service as an isolation cell.
“We renovated an existing jail cell into a true isolation cell, and we also built a new one,” Rasmussen said. “Before, we had problems housing certain kinds of inmates.”
Earlier this year, the Union County Board of Commissioners allocated $25,000 from the county contingency fund to help with the remodel and an upgrade of the jail’s surveillance camera system. The balance of the bill came out of the sheriff’s office budget.
Rasmussen said the board’s support has been vital to law enforcement efforts.
“I think it’s important to recognize what they’ve done,” he said. “It’s really made our job easier.”
On a related law enforcement note, the U.S. Office on Violence Against Women recently renewed the county’s Rural Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault and Stalking Assistance Program Grant.
The two-year grant renewal brings $348,500 into the Union County Assistance Program, a collaborative effort  of the sheriff’s office, Union County District Attorney’s Office, the county Victim’s Assistance Program, Community Corrections and Shelter from The Storm.
The original two-year grant provided funding to expand services to victims. With the new grant, the program will maintain the current level of services and expand outreach and education efforts.
Rasmussen said Falck deserves much of the credit
for the recent surge in grant funding.
She wrote the Rural Law Enforcement Assistance Grant, and, as coordinator of the Union County Assistance Program, made sure  all the requirements of the Rural Domestic Violence grant were met.
She worked with the OSP to bring the digital fingerprint unit to the jail and also assisted with the police department’s Edward Byrne grant.
“Her work in the grant writing arena and coordination of grant funding has been crucial,” Rasmussen said. “I greatly appreciate the work she has done for the sheriff’s office on behalf of the citizens of Union County.”
 

 
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