"This is where I want my family to grow up," says Officer Karl Ebbighausen, who began his policing career 16 years ago, as part of the five-man Woodstock (Vt.) Police Department. "Within a three-hour drive, we have Boston; within four hours, New York City; and two hours to Montreal...yet we're still in a rural area, with incredible schools. It's a good place to raise a family."
Vermont is the nation's eighth smallest state, and Hartford PD is one of only 49 police agencies statewide. The department operates with a $2.1 million budget and services a 38-square-mile service area, giving it the highest road mileage of any municipal police department in the entire Green Mountain State. The policing ratio in the Upper Valley is 2.2 officers per 1,000 residents.
Hartford police officers deal with the same bread-and-butter incidents that every small police department does: citizen assistance calls, underage drinking, neighbor disputes, property crimes, truancy, and traffic violations. Officers conduct animal control response and community policing campaigns in the public school system. The Hartford PD also serves as the Identification Center for Windsor County, and operates one of seven public safety answering points for Vermont's Enhanced 911.
"We wear many hats here," notes Ebbighausen, who does quadruple duty as a patrol officer, shift coordinator, field training officer, and firearms instructor. "Basically, you're a jack of all trades, master of none."
Hartford PD is overseen by Estey, a 30-year policing veteran who has served as chief since 1987. He also serves as president of the 20,000-member International Association of Chiefs of Police, and he brings political, administrative, and financial savvy to the chief's position.