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Education
The Police Department offers valuable educational resources for our residents and businesses. In addition to the training listed below, the Police Department offers an annual Citizens' Academy that offers citizens the opportunity to learn more about the employees of the police department and their combined efforts to ensure the safety of the community, as well as an annual https://greenwoodvillage.com/2626/Community---TEST#tab0631b75c-0094-4da4-bc9c-ddcfd53b3b5a_3 Youth Academy that offers youth ages 14-18 a variety of presentations on the operations of the Police Department and to share this information with the youth of the community that we serve.
- TIPS Training
- Ride-Along Program
- Active Threat Response Training
- False Alarms
- Emergency Preparedness
- Drones
TIPS/Responsible Server Training
The Village is home to many restaurants and bars providing opportunities for citizens to enjoy fine dining and entertainment. Responsible serving of alcohol is important to the safety of citizens who live and work in the Village.
The Greenwood Village Police Department supports several approved responsible vendors that provide either online or in-person alcohol serving training.
Please refer to this list of approved vendors to complete this training.
For more information, please call the City Clerk's office at 303-804-4113 or by email.
Ride-Along Program
Would you like to know more about Law Enforcement? Residents and police applicants are encouraged to participate in the Ride-Along Program.
Participants must complete a Ride-Along Application and will have a background check done before their Ride-Along date. All participants must be at least 18 years of age.
Participants are limited to a four-hour Ride-Along and must follow all rules and regulations set forth by the police department and the officer hosting the Ride-Along.
For more information, please call 303-773-2525.
Citizen's Active Threat Response Seminar
All training has been postponed due COVID restrictions. Please check back in the future for upcoming training.
Do you want to learn how to respond to an active threat or active shooter incident?
- Learn about options based active threat response protocols
- Hear about recent trends in active shooter events
- Discuss practical applications for effective deterrence and responses
Join Police Officers of the Greenwood Village Police Department to learn practical and simple tools and techniques to help you prepare for and respond to an active threat situation. This two-hour seminar is designed to increase awareness so citizens can be equipped with the knowledge and understanding of how to escape and stay alive in active threat incidents.
Each seminar will be held at Greenwood Village City Hall, 6060 South Quebec Street, Greenwood Village
For more information, please call 303-773-2525.
False Alarms & Their Impact On You
Alarm systems are designed to protect lives and property if they are installed, used, and maintained properly. When the alarm systems are not properly maintained, they do not work effectively jeopardizing the safety of your family, your home, and your personal belongings.
False alarms are caused by human error or equipment problems that go unnoticed or unaddressed, requiring a police response with no evidence of any crime being committed. Responding to false alarms is time-consuming and costly and can take police officers away from important calls for assistance. In fact, in a recent national survey, over 98% of the alarm calls that officers responded to were false, with less than 2% of the alarm calls that police responded to were the result of a criminal act.
What Causes False Alarms
There are a number of reasons why false alarms occur, including, but not limited to:
- Failure to train authorized users.
- Use of incorrect keypad codes.
- Failure to secure doors and windows before turning the alarm system on.
- Failure to notify monitoring facility of unscheduled openings or closings.
- Failure to update authorized personnel list or responsible parties with the monitoring company.
- Improper application or installation of interior motion detectors.
- Improper application or installation of outdoor beams.
- Improper charging or maintenance of batteries.
- Changes in the environment such as new animals, design changes, seasonal decorations, and plants.
- Faulty equipment (i.e. panels, detectors, keypads, etc.)
Know Your System
Understanding your alarm system and how it works will help reduce the number of false alarm calls police officers to respond to due to faulty systems or human error. Provided below are some tips that can help prevent your alarm system from being activated accidentally:
- If you accidentally set off your alarm, let your alarm monitoring station know immediately. Remember your passcode and/or password.
- Make sure all alarm users and key holders to the building are trained to use the system and know the codes to arm and disarm the system; including how to cancel a false alarm.
- Do not call 911 to cancel an alarm call. You must call your alarm monitoring station.
- You can arrange to have your alarm monitoring station call you or another designated person first instead of the police when your alarm is activated. This is known as call verification.
- If you expect workers, real estate agents, delivery personnel, etc. do not set your alarm. If you must set your alarm, meet the people at your site to deactivate the alarm. Remember that you are responsible for false alarms caused by them. You can also arrange with your alarm company to have separate codes for them.
- If your system sends a silent panic/duress signal when an incorrect code is entered, you might consider having that feature disconnected. Often when in a hurry to arm or disarm the alarm, an incorrect code is entered and the police are dispatched. Since the alarm was a panic/duress signal, you will not hear the alarm and your alarm monitoring station will not call you.
- Be sure that doors and windows are tight-fitting. Adjust hinges and strike plates to minimize movement when pulled or pushed on.
- Have an arming delay of at least 45 seconds on all doors.
- Have wide-gap sensors installed on all doors.
- Lock all protected doors and windows. Do not leave doors and windows open or unlocked while you are away. Be sure all doors and windows are properly closed and locked prior to arming the alarm system.
- Do not leave anything that will move (pets, plants, balloons, drapes, blinds, etc.) in a room that is protected with a motion detector.
- Have the sensitivity settings on motion detectors and glass-break sensors adjusted so that unwanted sounds or items do not activate them.
- You can arrange with your alarm company not to dispatch the police for interior motion sensor activations without having other sensors activated. This is known as "double sensor" dispatching.
- If storms or brief power outages of two (2) hours or less activate your alarm system, your system needs to be checked and adjusted.
- Call your alarm company after each false alarm to determine the cause of the false alarm. You will continue to have false alarms until the problem is repaired or adjusted.
- If a fence encloses your alarmed location, the police can not properly check your property. There are private security companies that can provide alarm responses to these locations.
- Have your alarm system checked and tested regularly. Having a service plan helps reduce future costs of equipment repair.
If your alarm system is more than five years old, now is the time to consider upgrading or updating the equipment.
False Alarm Fines
The Village has an ordinance regulating false alarms and imposes fines on the homeowner or business owner in an effort to reduce the number of false alarms that occur. The ordinance imposes fines beginning with the third false alarm:
- Third false alarm within a calendar year, one hundred and fifty dollars ($150.00);
- Fourth false alarm within a calendar year, two hundred and fifty dollars ($250.00);
- Fifth false alarm and each false alarm thereafter within a calendar year, three hundred and fifty dollars ($350.00) up to a maximum fine of nine hundred ninety-nine dollars $999.00 per violation.
This change will assist the Police Department with reducing the number of false alarms and allow time for police officers to focus on residential patrols in neighborhoods, traffic complaints, and crime prevention.
For more information, please call 303-773-2525.
What You Need to Know When Preparing for an Emergency
The goal of the Village Police Department is to help you plan and respond to emergency situations. Planning for any emergency requires considering all likely scenarios. Although Colorado does not experience disasters such as hurricanes and earthquakes, as residents you could experience winter storms, thunderstorms, tornadoes or even power outages for which you should be prepared. Electricity, water, heat, air conditioning, telephone service and transportation could be disrupted or lost for a considerable amount of time.
Emergency preparedness means having enough food, water, medications and other essentials on hand to last your family for three to five days for weather-related events. If you are required to evacuate your home, carry a winter survival kit in your vehicle. Suitable items include:
- Blankets
- Flashlight
- Shovel
- Jumper cables
- Road salt or kitty litter
- Flares or reflective triangles
- Local road maps
- High-calorie food like granola bars and cans of juice
Consider keeping an old cell phone and a power cord in each of your cars. Even if the phone does not have a service provider, it should still be able to dial 911.
Create a Family Emergency Plan
- Meet with household members to discuss the dangers of fire, severe weather, earthquakes and other emergencies. Explain how to respond to each.
- Find the safe areas in your home for each disaster.
- Draw a floor plan of your home and mark two escape routes from each room.
- Show family members how to turn off the water, gas and electricity at main switches when necessary.
- Post emergency telephone numbers near telephones.
- Teach children how and when to call 911, police and fire.
- Instruct household members to turn on the radio for emergency information.
- Pick one out-of-state and one local friend or relative for family members to call if separated during a disaster (it is often easier to call out-of-state than within the affected area).
- Work with family members about the steps needed to be ready if a disaster happens.
Prepare an Emergency Supplies Kit
Assemble supplies you might need in an evacuation. Keep the items that you would most likely need during an evacuation in an easy-to-carry container such as a backpack or duffel bag. There are several basics supplies you should stock when preparing for an emergency. The following information provides suggestions for emergency preparedness in your home, neighborhood, school, workplace, places of worship and public areas. For each situation, it is important to develop a household emergency preparedness plan that includes:
- An emergency preparedness kit.
- An escape plan that includes at least two emergency meeting places; one location outside your home or building in case of a sudden emergency, such as fire and a second location outside your neighborhood in case you can not return to your home, office or building.
- An emergency communications plan. Choose an out-of-town person to be your contact point for family members to call if you are separated. Make sure everyone has contact information including phone numbers and e-mail addresses.
For more information, please call 303-773-2525.
Drones
In order to protect public health and safety, the City Council adopted an ordinance to regulate the use of small unmanned aircraft (aircraft weighing less than 55 pounds inclusive of payload and attached systems and components operated without the possibility of direct human intervention from within or on the aircraft) where not otherwise regulated by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The following is a summary of the new ordinance:
Rules
Invasion of Privacy
- It is unlawful for a person to knowingly and intentionally use a small unmanned aircraft to observe another person or to capture or transmit an image, sound, or other physical impression of another person where the other person has a reasonable expectation of privacy;
Trespassing
- It is unlawful for any person to operate, launch or land a small unmanned aircraft on or from private property without the prior consent of the personal lawfully in possession of the property;
Harassment
- A person will commit harassment if they fly, use, launch, employ or navigate a small unmanned aircraft system in a manner MEANT to harass, annoy, or alarm the animals or human occupants of public or private property, or to observe, photograph, or visually record an individual or individuals on private property without permission or lawful authorization.
Interference with a Peace Officer or Firefighter
- It is unlawful for any person to operate a small unmanned aircraft in a manner that obstructs, impairs or hinders a peace officer or firefighter in the discharge or apparent discharge of his or her official duties.
Tips
Visit the Know Before You Fly website for valuable tips about flying your drone.