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2002 |
Police
Chief Fegette retires
Chief Hank Fegette
of the Black Butte Police Department retired last Friday, June 28. His 23
years of service to the Sisters Community were honored Friday evening at
a ceremony at the BBR lodge.
The position will be filled
by Chief Gil Zaccaro, who served for 14 years in North Bend before coming
to Sisters.
"This is a great job and Hank's
made it that way," said Zaccaro, who added that he's known of Fegette's
reputation longer than he's known the man. "He's very well regarded throughout
the state."
"Everyone knows Hank," said
Bob Lengele, Chairman of the police board at BBR. "He's an icon of the
Ranch."
At the time of Fegette's retirement,
he was among the longest-tenured police chiefs in the state of Oregon
and the only chief that BBR has known. He watched the department's budget
grow from "just enough to pay our salaries," to $688,000 this past year.
In 1990, he worked with the
community to create the Black Butte Police District.
"The community was right there
to support us all the way," said Fegette.
Such loyalty and friendship
are basic to what Fegette appreciates about the Sisters community.
"You stick out your hand here
and somebody shakes it," said Fegette, "If you call for need, you may
have three or four people there to help."
Fegette came to BBR in 1979
after serving for 17 years with the Burbank (California) Police Department.
He was honored by the City of Burbank as Officer of the Quarter in 1976
and Officer of the Year in 1977.
"As a police officer, you
were on your toes all the time," said Fegette of the California city where
he grew up, which had an area roughly the same as BBR, and a population
of 200,000.
It was on those streets that
Fegette gained his respect and admiration for police officers.
"If it hadn't been for an
LAPD officer to turn us around at times, I don't know where we'd be,"
said Fegette of he and his friends in their youth.
"People make honest mistakes,"
said Fegette who, rather than taking pride in his arrest count, seems
to honor the relationships he's developed and people he's helped over
the years.
"You see and do things in
this job that you'll never forget, but you override that with the good
things in life... saving someone's life; turning a kid's life around."
The residents of BBR obviously
appreciate Fegette's style of policing.
"He is diplomatically honest,"
said Lengele.
Looking for a small town to
live in, Fegette had never been to Oregon before his interview at the
Ranch.
While it's not clear whether
the clean air and small town atmosphere influenced him to stay as much
as the lodge condos and nightly prime rib dinners -- one attraction is
clear.
"In this town, when you have
a friend you have a friend. You're the only one that can screw that up,"
says Fegette.
Fegette, who has two sons
at Sisters High School, is currently president of the High School Booster
club and a member of the Field of Dreams committee.
"There's no way I'd move away
from Sisters. I love the high school here," he said.
He hopes Coach Bob Macauley
will let him "shadow coach" the football team in the fall, and jokes that
"they already lock the high school doors when they see me coming."
Beyond community service,
he will keep busy with his '68 Camaro and classic car club. He will also
work on his collection of some 3,400 police badges and plans to do some
traveling.
Looking back on 43 years of
service, Fegette is a little surprised at where the time has gone.
"I take pride in being in
it this long," he said. "I enjoyed every minute of it. I had a real strong
belief that the Lord would place me where he wanted me. He put me here
and I haven't regretted it."
Fegette knows how he would
like to be remembered:
"I really cared about what
I was doing and that I was a good police officer." |
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