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CCJS Lecturer, Laurel PD Chief Receives Help from Fellow Terps

Russell E. Hammill III is a lecturer in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice. He shared the following account of Terps helping others amid the COVID-19 response:

As some of you know, I teach in the CCJS Department, and I recently retired as the Interim Police Chief in Montgomery County and became Chief of the Laurel Police Department. Under my usual perfect timing, I arrive in time to barely know my way around town when we begin to manage our efforts for the COVID-19 response.

As with many other first responders, we have faced issues with obtaining some needed PPE, including hand sanitizer. I recently saw a news clip about members of our own A. James Clark School of Engineering now dedicating their efforts at producing hand sanitizers for public safety and others responsible for responding to this health crisis. I contacted the two professors leading the project, explained who I am, and shamelessly noted we are colleagues here at the University of Maryland. I acknowledge that any help would be appreciated although I knew they were likely being inundated with requests and I didn’t expect to hear from them for sometime.

Then, within a few minutes of sending my email, Professor Chen Zhang wrote me back and advised that they were going to make another batch of sanitizer soon and would be glad to help us as best they could. This is not the only amazing part; within two hours of my original email, the Bioengineering department chair, Professor Peter Kofinas, surprised us by personally delivering a supply of hand sanitizer to our station.

This is an amazing story of people we work with, but never meet, caring about other folks they’ve never met: but just wanting to do an act of goodness and kindness during some tough times. What they didn’t know is I’ve had 12 of my folks put in COVID-19 protocols for testing and quarantine. In the week leading up to my email, I lost half of my communications staff due to a positive test.  The required quarantines followed, and I was also concerned that I would lose one of our people. We had to close our communications division down and move operations to an alternate site. People were very concerned for their safety and welfare (and that of their loved ones), and then our friends at the Engineering School ride in to provide relief and comfort during a tough time.

Two things: having the sanitizer is important, but, even more meaningful, is knowing that someone who doesn’t know you, has never met you and likely never would meet you cared enough about other human beings on the front lines of a dangerous situation to get this done in a few hours. You really can’t express into words what that does for your spirit, for your hope. This isn’t really about the sanitizer (again very important), it’s about being human beings and caring about one another, just because of that. Just because that’s what we’re supposed to do—care about each other.

Thanks to Professor Zhang and Professor/Chair Peter Kofinas and their students—for a lot more than you probably realized. Although thanks doesn’t quite cover it.

Russell E. Hamill III

 

Published on Thu, Apr 23, 2020 - 9:40AM

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