County Seal
Nassau County Home Contact Us
 
break
break
break
break
break
break
County Executive
Breadcrumb Start you are here >Home/

Suozzi Announces New Police Academy to Open in Massapequa

-- Larger Facility More Than Doubles Square Footage of Current Academy; Includes New Intelligence Center

Mineola, NY – As part of his continuing commitment to improve public safety and keep Nassau County the safest municipality of its size in the nation, Nassau County Executive Thomas R. Suozzi today announced that a new Nassau County Police Academy is set to open in Massapequa by the end of this year.

The 50,000-square-foot facility will replace three trailer-style modular buildings on the grounds of the Nassau County Correctional Center in East Meadow, where the academy has been housed since 1996.

“Our officers work hard every day to protect us, and they deserve a top-notch training facility,” Suozzi said. “Good training is the key to disciplined, effective and fair policing. This academy will provide the department with the latest crime fighting equipment, including a new Intelligence Center, in an updated facility. The new academy brings a large portion of our training – for recruits and for police officers already on the job – into one location, and expands the resources available for this critical task.”

The academy will be housed in the Hawthorn School, formerly a Massapequa elementary school that for the past five years has been used by BOCES as an instructional technology center and teacher training site. The Police Department will lease the building from the Massapequa Union Free School District. School and county officials have reached an agreement in principle concerning use of the site.

Police Commissioner James H. Lawrence called the new academy a welcome addition. “This will enable us to continue to provide top-notch training to our recruits in an environment that will enhance their introduction to police work,” he said. “It also will expand our ability to provide continuing educational opportunities to officers now on the job. And it gives us a new intelligence center, which will enhance emergency response to criminal threats and homeland security concerns.”

“This partnership between Nassau County and the Massapequa School District is an exemplary example of agencies working together for the good of the community,” said Massapequa School Board President Arlene Martin. “Having the police academy in the largest Nassau school district means we will have consultants available to review our safety plans as well as any CPR or defibrillator training that we need in the future. We are pleased that the building will be used for maximum benefit to so many Nassau County residents.”

The new academy will provide 2½ times the square footage of the current academy, while continuing to train 150 recruits at a time. In addition, there will be space for in-service training for as many as 50 current officers. The new academy will include 13 larger classrooms, as well two large lecture halls – one of which is large enough to be used as an assembly area. The 3,100 square foot meeting room also will be available for use by the Massapequa School District and for community meetings.

The academy will have new facilities to teach recruits defensive tactics, as well as a computer training facilities and traditional classrooms. Along with the training of new recruits, the new academy will provide a site for training for officers already on the force and a new state-of-the-art intelligence center that will improve the department’s readiness for emergency response and homeland security.

The new police academy is another sign of the Suozzi administration’s commitment to ensuring that the Nassau County Police Department receives the resources it needs to maintain the highest level of professionalism and crime fighting capability. Under the Suozzi administration, the county has been recognized as the safest municipality of its size in the nation. Suozzi has authorized the hiring of 469 new police officers during the last 2½ years - more than in all of the ten prior years – and increased the detective ranks to 425, which is 20 positions above the number of detectives when Suozzi took office. Through conservative management of the county’s finances, Suozzi has been able to free up funds to invest in key projects – like the police academy – that impact public safety.