Despite what the tourism board would have you believe, Vegas does experience winter. January nights sometimes fall down into the teens, freezing the hotel fountains and perplexing tourists who brought nothing to Sin City but lightweight clothing.
But the real weather concern for Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department's motorcycle officers is the heat. Summer highs rarely dip below triple digits, which makes a 10-hour shift on a motorcycle an endurance event, especially for officers dressed in high motorcycle boots, double thickness wool pants, a uniform shirt, and a ballistic vest.
Officer Steve Ritchey, a Las Vegas Metro Police Department motorcycle officer and trainer, says officers working the Vegas streets are actually being baked in the summer. "We took out a digital thermometer and measured the heat coming up from the asphalt and from the motorcycle when sitting in traffic, and got a reading of 450 degrees. It's like opening your oven at home and you get that blast of heat," he says.
Born to the Bike
Despite such conditions, Las Vegas Metro's motorcycle unit has no shortage of applicants. The unit fields 140 sworn officers, including patrol, supervisors, and trainers. And turnover is low. Ritchey says he is fourth in seniority among the motor officers, and he has served in the unit for 21 years of his 24-year career with Metro.