“We had resources deployed to multiple locations. So, it wasn’t just the stadium that we were concerned about. We had hotels that the teams were staying at, we had obviously the LA Convention Center where the NFL Experience was taking place, and then you throw in the curveball of having to coordinate federal resources and understanding that what the NFL was asking for was atypical, like having canine sweeps and canine officers staffed at all these different venues in large numbers,” says Officer Jay Park, who is part of the three-person Special Events unit under the Homeland Security Division at Inglewood PD. “I feel comfortable in saying that planning for Super Bowl took over a year.”
Park talks of the extensive planning and collaboration of agencies for the Super Bowl, but said it takes time. He points to the NFC championship game coming to SoFi and how with a just a one-week notice Inglewood PD and the other agencies were able to work it out. But, the big game at the culmination of the season was a totally different challenge.
“If we only had a week for Super Bowl, I don’t know if we would have had the game,” Park says.
Inglewood PD Lt. Scott Collins, who is the department’s public information officer, explains how the officers were able to practice along the way and build up to what they needed to learn to host the Super Bowl successfully.
“Working games previously, even with COVID, we had to work games before we could have fans. So, that let us to kind of get our feet wet with not everybody there yet, and then next we had the fans when we were working regular season games, and then we had the planning for the Super Bowl,” says Collins.