By Jeff Murphy,
                                                									July 24, 2023
                                             
                                             
                                                
                                                
                                                
                                                
Participants in the Sedalia Police Department’s formal presentation of a 2017 Dodge
                                                      Charger with emergency lights to the Missouri Safety Center at the University of Central
                                                      Missouri included, from left, SPD officers Josh Howell, Adam Hendricks, David Woolery,
                                                      Police Chief Matt Wirt, UCM President Roger Best, and Missouri Safety Center Senior
                                                      Program Manager Mike Perkins.
WARRENSBURG, MO - A collaboration that will enhance learning experiences for individuals
                                                   seeking law enforcement careers, the Sedalia Police Department has donated a used
                                                   patrol car to the Missouri Safety Center at the University of Central Missouri. The
                                                   formal presentation event took place on July 19, the same week a group of 27 Central
                                                   Missouri Police Academy (CMPA) cadets began a training program that will allow them
                                                   to utilize the car at the Safety Center’s Highway Safety Instructional Park, south
                                                   of UCM’s main campus in Warrensburg.
Sedalia Police Chief Matt Wirt was joined by three SPD command staff members, Adam
                                                   Hendricks, Josh Howell, and David Woolery, to deliver the 2017 Dodge Charger, equipped
                                                   with siren and emergency lights. They were met by UCM President Roger Best, representatives
                                                   of the Missouri Safety Center, UCM Harmon College of Business and Professional Studies
                                                   and members of area law enforcement agencies that are sponsoring cadets in CMPA’s
                                                   166th class. Three of the class members, Tyler LaBoube, Lyndon North, and Jesse Page,
                                                   are sponsored by the SPD. Other area police and sheriff’s departments that attended
                                                   the event and are sponsoring CMPA cadets represent Johnson, Lafayette, Morgan, and
                                                   Pettis counties and the Warrensburg Police Department.
In talking about how the gift of this patrol car was made possible, Wirt said, “As
                                                   we were transitioning from Dodge Chargers to Durangos, it gave us this opportunity.
                                                   Members of the academy and the safety center indicated they needed more modern cars
                                                   for their operation, so I went to the (Sedalia) city administrator and the mayor and
                                                   asked if there was something we could donate that could help.”
Sedalia municipal leaders were in favor of the donating the former patrol car to the
                                                   Missouri Safety Center, which oversees CMPA. Following approval by the Sedalia City
                                                   Council, the vehicle now has a new home, helping to prepare individuals for law enforcement
                                                   careers.
“The commitment to the work of the police academy and our law enforcement continuing
                                                   training is essential for safety in the profession,” said Joanne Kurt-Hilditch, Ph.D.,
                                                   senior director of the Missouri Safety Center.” With newer technology and equipment,
                                                   such as donated vehicles, our cadets and officers are able to practice in more real-life
                                                   scenarios and become better equipped to being safe and effective on our roadways.”
Tim Lowry, a career police officer who serves as director of CMPA, said the car will
                                                   help create realistic scenarios for testing cadets’ driving skills, including learning
                                                   how to make traffic stops. The emergency lighting that comes with the donated vehicle
                                                   enables its use for both daytime and nighttime training.
President Best had an opportunity to test drive the patrol car before joining Missouri
                                                   Safety Center Senior Program Manager Mike Perkins to formally accept the vehicle.
                                                   Both of them participated in photo sessions with cadets and law enforcement personnel
                                                   from various other organizations attending the event. 
Wirt, who has served the Sedalia Police Department for 24 years, said he was pleased
                                                   to be able to give back to a program which helped him prepare for his law enforcement
                                                   career. After serving as a reserve officer in Sedalia, he attended the CMPA in the
                                                   1990s. His community’s investment in his training paid off with Wirt continuing to
                                                   work full time, eventually becoming Sedalia’s police chief.
“It’s nice to give back. I have a soft place for people who want to come into this
                                                   profession,” he said. “It’s getting harder to find people, especially those who are
                                                   really dedicated. So anything I can do to help them to enjoy this experience and to
                                                   get a realistic training opportunity with a patrol car, it is great. It means a lot
                                                   to me.”
The Missouri Safety Center and the CMPA are part of the Harmon College of Business
                                                   and Professional Studies. Between July and December 2023, members of the 166th class
                                                   will receive 835 hours of training in the academy, which is licensed by the Missouri
                                                   Department of Public Safety’s Peace Officer Standards and Training Program. 
To learn more about the Missouri Safety Center and the CMPA, visit .
                                                
                                                
Representatives of the Sedalia Police Department (SPD), University of Central Missouri,
                                                      Missouri Safety Center, Central Missouri Police Academy and its 166th class of cadets
                                                      gather around a 2017 Dodge Charger patrol car recently donated to the Missouri Safety
                                                      Center.