Letter to the Editor: Police training on campus

To the NECC Observer:

I have been an adjunct faculty member at the college for 18 years, and it has been my privilege to teach here, especially as a former student and graduate. The college has always been invested in partnering with our surrounding communities in an attempt to serve them in any way we can, and that is an admirable mission. Public community colleges should do more than simply educate students. We should be resources, in as many ways as we can, for the communities we serve and, for the most part, I’ve been very proud of how the college has fulfilled that mission.

In fairly recent years, however, the college has become home to two police training academies, and I have become increasingly dismayed and discomfited by the impact these training academies are having on our Haverhill campus. Some students and faculty have expressed discomfort at the way recruits address us as we are passing by. Even though they are doing so respectfully, it can feel threatening. Other students have expressed alarm at the harsh manner in which recruits are being spoken to, including the use of yelling and profanities. The training drills held on grounds outside of classrooms have always been at least mildly disruptive to those of us trying to teach in classrooms where the drilling can be heard, and to the students we are trying to teach.

This semester, I have noticed that the training drills increasingly resemble the kind of drills one would expect in the military. Recruits are crawling on the ground while flash-bangs are deployed, and they are practicing aggressive fighting maneuvers aimed at disarming and even disabling citizens they might interact with. Today when I arrived at campus, multiple police vehicles with lights flashing were all practicing interacting with occupants of vehicles, with guns drawn and pointed. I am forced to wonder why recruits are being trained to expect and respond to the most violent possible confrontations with the citizens they are charged with serving and protecting, and I personally feel less safe knowing this is the way police recruits are being trained on our very own campus. In light of the conversation nationwide on the need for police reform, and especially because the college has a criminal justice program, this seems especially relevant to the young people we are charged with not just teaching our subject matter, but teaching to think critically about national and world problems.

I hope that this will be a vehicle for further input from the college community at large, and I hope that the Observer will consider canvassing the college community for their opinions.

Respectfully,

Janet Clark

Top-seeded volleyball team heads into tournament

The NECC Knights volleyball team plays Mass Bay Community College
The NECC Knights volleyball in action against Mass Bay Community College on Oct. 16. Photo by Jose Rodriguez, Sports Editor

The top-seeded NECC women’s volleyball team will host the NJCAA Region 21 tournament Oct. 23 at the Sports and Fitness Center.

The volleyball head coach is Mike Pelosi. It is his first head coach job at college, but he has experience coaching in high school and clubs.

Pelosi has more than 10 years experience with the Pumas Volleyball Club in North Andover and has experience at both Haverhill High School and Timberlane Regional High School.

On Saturday, Oct. 16 at noon the NECC women’s volleyball team faced off against Mass Bay Community College in the Sports and Fitness Center on the Haverhill campus.  Entering the Oct. 16 game the NECC Knights were five and one in conference games. That’s good for a .833% overall in their season. They were five and seven coming into the Oct. 16 contest. In non-conference games they were 0 and six, according to the NECC Knights website.

The first set they started off with a 5-0 and a 15-2 run to win the set 25-6.

They came aggressive as the game started. They had energy as the game progressed, and they were hungry to win.

This season in 10 matches NECC freshman Dejaale Torres of Lawrence had 2.54 kills per set, .080 hitting percentage, 0.32 assist per set, 0.30 blocks per set, 0.65 service aces per set and a 2.65 digs per set, according to the NECC Knights website.

The first team to win three sets wins the game. The first set is always key to win because that means the other team has pressure.   “After we played the first set it really brought our energy up and we started playing better,” said Torres.

The players were confident that they could put this game away after winning the first set.

The second set they started off to a slow start but managed to win the set 25-16.

Lowell High School graduate freshman Kaithlene Perez-Flores in 10 matches had stats of 1.49 kills per set, .084 hitting percentage, 0.27 assist per set, 0.11 service aces per set and 3.22 digs per set before the  Oct. 16 game, according to the NECC Knights website.

NECC Knights volleyball team celebrates after winning a set in a game against Mass Bay Community College Oct. 16.
NECC Knights volleyball team celebrates after winning a set in a game against Mass Bay Community College Oct. 16. Photo by Jose Rodriguez, Sports Editor

They were able to come back midpoint during the second set to win. “I feel like we all pick each other up and start focusing on the mistake and focused in the next point what we can do to fix that,” Perez-Flores said.

It was key for the team to focus and rebound to win the set after starting the second half slow. When the Knights had a 2-0 set lead that gave Mass Bay Community College almost no chance to win the game.

The third set they started a 14-2 run that was enough to defeat Mass Bay Community College in three straight sets 25-6, 25-16 and 25-7.  Before the game Coach Pelosi told the girls “we played this team before we had a success outcome against them, and I wanted to make sure that we came in with the same sense of focus and urgency against them so what I told them the outcome is not decided yet and it is not going to be the better team that win this match it’s going to be the team that plays better today.”

They had a pretty good idea who they were facing as they were facing the same team nine days prior of the Oct. 16 match up at Mass Bay Community College.  The Knights  won the season series against Mass Bay by going 2-0 and each time they faced each other the Knights shut out Mass Bay three set to 0.

The Knights team has home field advantage for the Oct. 23 game as they start a Region 21 tournament.They will play Holyoke Community College at 11 a.m. The winner will play the championship game at 3 p.m.