NIC Basic Patrol Academy graduates 12 students
Sometimes a class is more than a classroom.
It may involve hands-on training, like handling firearms, driving through high-speed courses or getting tased.
At North Idaho College’s 16-week Basic Patrol Academy, those things are just the start.
NIC held a graduation ceremony for 12 Basic Patrol Academy students Thursday, May 4, at the Lake Coeur d’Alene Room in the Edminster Student Union Building on NIC’s Coeur d’Alene campus.
The ceremony featured speakers from law enforcement and NIC, including NIC President Nick Swayne, Basic Patrol Academy coordinator Jeremy Hyle, Kootenai County Sheriff Bob Norris, Idaho State Police Chaplin Sara Garrison and Basic Patrol Academy Class President Ian MacArthur.
The NIC Basic Patrol Academy is designed in a paramilitary academy format and accredited by the Idaho Peace Officers Standards and Training Council. Class meets five days a week for eight or more hours per day.
“We have a very professional staff,” Swayne said. “We aspire to be the best law enforcement training staff in the state of Idaho.”
This semester, the Basic Patrol Academy also trained alongside the first class of NIC’s Basic Detention Academy, which held its graduation in March.
“I adamantly believe this trend should continue,” MacArthur said. “While (the detention academy) was with us, we were able to become a family and work well together. … We now know we have friendly faces to see when we stop by the public safety building, and I truly believe this will only bring these two parts of law enforcement closer together.”
Graduate Shayla Walton said her family has made careers in law enforcement, and after working 10 years in the health care industry, she decided to try the career path herself. She said she was amazed by the quality of education offered through the academy.
Approximately 50 law enforcement experts teach more than 60 topics, sharing knowledge with students through skills training and scenario-based training in the classroom and the field.
“The instructors are passionate and encouraging in the subjects they teach,” Walton said. “There’s so much that goes into this; I don’t understand how they packed as much as they did into it.”
NIC offers three levels of certification in law enforcement, including a Basic Technical Certificate, which is awarded upon completion of the Basic Patrol Academy, an Intermediate Technical Certificate and an Associate of Applied Science degree.
For information, contact Abby Owens at Abigail.Owens@nic.edu or 208-665-4522.