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Part 2 - Look for the Good in Parsons

Look for the Good in Parsons: A Blueprint for Safer Communities

PART 2: People-Focused Policing - The Core of Public Safety

By Parsons Police Chief Robert Spinks

When most people think about policing, they often picture flashing lights, emergency calls, arrests, or officers responding to dangerous situations. Those moments are certainly part of the profession, but they do not define the heart of effective policing.

At its core, public safety is about people.

Crime prevention is not simply about stopping offenders after a crime occurs. It is about building relationships strong enough to prevent crime before it starts. It is about understanding the needs of victims, supporting families in crisis, mentoring young people, and creating neighborhoods where trust and cooperation make criminal behavior harder to take root.

That philosophy is at the center of our "Look for the Good in Parsons" initiative.

Across the country, policing is evolving. Professional organizations and leadership programs such as Police2Peace, International Association of Chiefs of Police, and FBI-LEEDA are encouraging agencies to rethink how they engage with the communities they serve. The emphasis is shifting away from a purely reactive model of policing toward a more people-centered approach built on communication, legitimacy, trust, and partnership.

The Police2Peace philosophy specifically challenges officers to view themselves not simply as law enforcement officers, but as peace officers. That distinction matters.

A peace officer understands that authority alone rarely solves long-term community problems. Real public safety is built through empathy, professionalism, procedural justice, and meaningful human connection. It is built when citizens believe they are heard, respected, and treated fairly regardless of the situation.

In practical terms, people-focused policing means our officers understand that every interaction matters.

  • A traffic stop matters.
  • A conversation with a teenager matters.
  • A response to a neighborhood complaint matters.
  • A casual interaction at a school event or local business matters.

Every contact either strengthens public trust or weakens it.

Research consistently shows that communities are more likely to cooperate with police when they believe officers are acting fairly and respectfully. Procedural justice-the idea that people are more willing to comply with the law when they feel they have been treated with dignity-is becoming a cornerstone of modern policing standards nationwide.

Why is that important?

Because trust directly impacts crime prevention.

Communities that trust their police officers are more willing to report suspicious activity, share information, identify offenders, testify in court, and partner with law enforcement to solve problems before they escalate into violence or disorder. Information shared early can prevent burglaries, assaults, drug activity, and even acts of retaliation or domestic violence.

In many ways, trust is one of the most valuable crime prevention tools a police department can have.

That is why our department continues to emphasize communication, visibility, and relationship-building throughout Parsons. Being people-focused means listening before acting whenever possible. It means understanding that sometimes people simply want to be heard. It means recognizing that many community conflicts can be reduced through dialogue, mediation, and early intervention rather than enforcement alone.

This philosophy is especially important when working with young people.

Youth engagement is one of the most critical long-term investments any community can make. Every positive interaction between a police officer and a young person helps shape perceptions about authority, accountability, and community responsibility. Programs involving mentorship, school engagement, and informal relationship-building help bridge gaps before misunderstandings or mistrust develop.

A teenager who sees police officers as approachable mentors today is less likely to view law enforcement as adversaries tomorrow.

People-focused policing also means recognizing that officers themselves must maintain professionalism, emotional intelligence, and compassion even during difficult situations. The profession can be demanding, stressful, and emotionally exhausting. Yet maintaining composure and treating people with dignity-even when tensions are high-is essential to preserving community confidence.

The reality is this: public safety cannot be achieved by police departments alone.

No agency can arrest its way to a stronger community. Sustainable crime prevention requires partnerships with citizens, schools, businesses, churches, civic organizations, and families. It requires communities that are engaged, connected, and willing to work together toward common goals.

That is what "Look for the Good in Parsons" is really about.

It is about recognizing the strengths that already exist within our community and building upon them. It is about seeing potential in people rather than simply focusing on problems. It is about creating an environment where trust, communication, and shared responsibility become the foundation for a safer city.

When communities and police departments work together, remarkable things happen.

  • Neighborhoods become stronger.
  • Communication improves.
  • Fear decreases.
  • Crime opportunities shrink.

And perhaps most importantly, people begin to believe in each other again.

The future of public safety in Parsons will not be defined solely by enforcement statistics or arrest numbers. It will be defined by the quality of our relationships, the strength of our neighborhoods, and our collective willingness to work together for the common good.

Because in the end, crime prevention is about people.

And when we look for the good in people, we often find the very partnerships that make safer communities possible.


Look For The Good in Parsons - Vision

Graphic describing the Good in Parsons Kansas

 

BLOG SERIES TITLE:

"Look for the Good in Parsons: A Blueprint for Safer Communities"

This is the first of the 7 Pillars of Crime Prevention & Community Livability I'll be sharing with the community. Our community has always had great potential and it's time for us all to 'Look for the Good in Parsons." We can see the potential and build a safer future. The crime trend since 2009 has been moving toward lower crime and a safer community.

A proactive approach to policing that focuses on people, strengthens neighborhoods, and prevents crime before it happens is our goal. Can it happen 100% of the time - of course not - we all know the SE Kansas does not have unlimited resources. But police and the community can try. Naysayers will always complain and throw rocks, that's not new, just like there will always be bullies. But a community should never cater to these Drama Llamas.


PART 1: Vision - Seeing What Others Miss
Effective crime prevention does not begin with a patrol car, a report, or even a 911 call. It begins much earlier-with how we choose to see our community, interpret risk, and define our role within it.

Policing today is undergoing a structural shift that cannot be ignored. Across the profession, agencies are moving away from purely reactive enforcement models and toward proactive, intelligence-informed, and community-centered approaches. This evolution is supported by organizations such as the International Association of Chiefs of Police, which has consistently emphasized that sustainable public safety outcomes are achieved when data, partnerships, and prevention strategies are integrated into daily operations rather than treated as separate initiatives.

At its core, this is about vision.

Vision as a policing function-not a slogan
In Parsons, "look for the good" is not a feel-good message or public relations theme. It is a deliberate operational mindset. Vision in policing means training ourselves to see beyond incidents and instead identify patterns, conditions, and opportunities that shape those incidents in the first place. It's the same if you own or run a business, its the same for your neighborhood.

It asks a different set of questions:

  1. What conditions are creating repeated calls in a specific area?
  2. Where are the informal community strengths that are not reflected in crime reports?
  3. Which individuals, families, or neighborhoods would benefit from engagement before enforcement becomes necessary?
  4. What risks are emerging that have not yet become crime-but are trending in that direction?
  5. This is where modern policing becomes more effective-not by doing more of the same, but by seeing differently.

From reaction to anticipation
Traditional policing has often been measured by response time and case clearance. Those metrics still matter. But they do not fully capture prevention, which is where the most meaningful safety gains occur.

Forward-leaning agencies are increasingly adopting principles consistent with intelligence-led and community policing models: using data, officer insight, and community input to anticipate problems rather than simply respond to them after harm has occurred.

When vision is applied correctly:

  • Patterns are identified before they become crises
  • Chronic locations are addressed through problem-solving rather than repeated enforcement cycles
  • Social indicators of disorder are treated as early warning signals, not background noise
  • Resources are deployed strategically, not just geographically
  • This is not theoretical. It is practical policing discipline.

Seeing strengths, not just deficits
One of the most underutilized tools in public safety is the ability to recognize community assets. Every neighborhood in Parsons has them-stable households, engaged business owners, informal mentors, faith-based support systems, and residents who care deeply but are not always formally connected to public safety efforts. Our schools are strong and out community college is a cornerstone for our region.

Looking for the good means actively identifying those strengths and integrating them into the safety ecosystem. When police only focus on problems, they miss the structures that prevent problems from growing in the first place.

Sustainable crime reduction is rarely achieved by enforcement alone. It is achieved when enforcement is paired with community capacity.

Why this matters for Parsons specifically
Smaller communities like Parsons are uniquely positioned to benefit from a vision-driven approach to policing. We are small enough that relationships matter deeply, but complex enough that emerging risks-substance abuse trends, property crime cycles, and social instability-can develop quietly before becoming visible.

That makes early recognition critical. In practical terms, vision allows us to:

  1. Intervene earlier in problem areas
  2. Strengthen partnerships before trust is tested by crisis
  3. Allocate limited resources more effectively
  4. Prevent small issues from becoming long-term public safety burdens

The professional standard
This approach is not optional in modern policing-it is becoming the expectation. The International Association of Chiefs of Police and similar professional bodies continue to reinforce that the future of law enforcement is rooted in prevention, collaboration, and informed decision-making rather than isolated incident response.

In that context, vision is not abstract leadership language. It is a professional requirement.

Bottom line
Vision changes the trajectory of policing. It moves us from simply answering calls to understanding why calls are happening. It replaces short-term reaction with long-term prevention. And most importantly, it ensures that in Parsons, we are not just responding to problems-we are actively working to see them early enough to prevent them altogether.

Robert Spinks, MA, MS


9PM Routine for Crime Prevention

Chief's Blog - Parsons Police Department
By Chief Robert Spinks

The 9 PM Routine: A Simple Habit That Prevents Crime

Every community wants to feel safe. In Parsons, Kansas, we are fortunate to live in a place where neighbors still look out for one another and where the police department works closely with citizens to prevent crime before it happens. One of the simplest and most effective crime-prevention habits any household can adopt is something called the 9 PM Routine.

It takes less than five minutes each evening, but it can prevent many of the most common crimes we see across the country.

What Is the 9 PM Routine?

The 9 PM Routine is a national crime prevention campaign that encourages residents to conduct a quick nightly security check of their homes and vehicles. The concept began with law enforcement in Pasco County, Florida in 2017 and has since spread to police departments across the United States and Canada.

The goal is simple:
Make your home and property a harder target for criminals.

Most property crimes - especially thefts from vehicles and burglaries - are crimes of opportunity. Criminals are often simply looking for the easiest target. Unlocked cars, open garages, or valuables left in plain sight create opportunities that offenders exploit. The 9 PM Routine reminds residents to take a moment each evening to remove those opportunities.

The Five-Minute Checklist
At 9:00 PM each night, take a quick walk through your property and check the following:

πŸ”’ Lock vehicle doors
Many vehicle burglaries occur simply because the vehicle was left unlocked.

πŸš— Remove valuables from your car
Wallets, firearms, purses, electronics, tools, and garage door openers should not be left in vehicles.

🏠 Lock doors and windows on your home
Even in small communities, unlocked doors can invite crime.

πŸšͺ Close and secure garage doors and sheds

πŸ’‘ Turn on exterior lighting
Good lighting reduces hiding places and deters criminal activity.

πŸ“¦ Bring in packages, bikes, and tools

🚨 Activate alarm systems or security cameras

These simple steps can significantly reduce theft and burglary risks.

Why It Matters in Communities Like Parsons
Small communities are not immune to crime. In fact, property crimes often occur in quiet neighborhoods because offenders believe residents are less likely to lock doors or secure property.

Across the country, police departments consistently report that a large percentage of theft-from-vehicle cases involve unlocked vehicles.

When someone walks down a street pulling on car door handles, they are not breaking into cars. They are simply checking for unlocked ones.

That is why the 9 PM Routine works.

It removes the opportunity.

And when opportunity disappears, many crimes never occur.

Crime Prevention Is a Community Partnership
One of the most important principles in modern policing is this:

Police cannot prevent crime alone.

Crime prevention works best when citizens and law enforcement work together. Programs like the 9 PM Routine empower residents to play a direct role in protecting their homes and neighborhoods.

When thousands of households in a community take a few minutes to secure their property every night, it changes the environment for criminals. It tells them:

This is not an easy place to commit crime.

Make It a Family Habit
The best way to adopt the 9 PM Routine is to make it part of your nightly schedule.

Many families:

• Set a phone alarm for 9:00 PM
• Ask children to help check doors or lights
• Make it part of the nightly routine before bed

Reporting Suspicious Activity
Crime prevention also includes reporting suspicious activity. If you see something unusual in your neighborhood:

🚨 Emergency: Call 911
πŸ“ž Non-emergency Parsons Police number is 620-421-7060

Five Minutes That Can Prevent a Crime
The 9 PM Routine reminds us that crime prevention often comes down to simple habits.

  • Lock a door.
  • Turn on a light.
  • Bring valuables inside.

These small actions send a powerful message that our community is paying attention.

And when communities pay attention, crime has a harder time finding opportunity.

Tonight at 9 PM, take a few minutes to check your home and vehicles.

You might prevent a crime before it ever happens.

9PM Routine Theft Prevention Tips


Spring Safety in Parsons: A Season of Renewal and Responsibility

As the weather warms and the flowers begin to bloom across Parsons, we welcome the arrival of spring and the sense of renewal it brings to our community. After the colder months, spring offers an opportunity to get outside, reconnect with neighbors, and enjoy the parks, sidewalks, and neighborhoods that make Parsons such a special place to live and work.

For many of us, spring means more time outdoors-whether that's taking evening walks, jogging through local neighborhoods, riding bicycles with family, or simply enjoying the longer daylight hours. Children are back outside playing, families are visiting parks, and community events begin to fill the calendar again. It is one of the most active and vibrant seasons of the year.

While spring brings excitement and energy, it also comes with new safety considerations. As activity increases throughout the city, we must all remain mindful of our surroundings and take steps to ensure that our streets, sidewalks, and public spaces remain safe for everyone.

The Parsons Police Department encourages residents to enjoy the season while also keeping safety a top priority.

 



Pedestrian Safety
With more residents walking and exercising outdoors, pedestrian safety becomes increasingly important. Being aware of traffic, following roadway rules, and remaining alert can significantly reduce the risk of accidents.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) offers the following important safety reminders for pedestrians:

  • Follow the rules of the road and obey all traffic signs and signals.
  • Cross streets at crosswalks or intersections whenever possible, and always look for vehicles in all directions-including those turning left or right.
  • If a crosswalk or intersection is not available, choose a well-lit area with a clear view of traffic and wait for a safe gap before crossing. Continue watching traffic while crossing.
  • Use sidewalks whenever they are available.
  • If there is no sidewalk, walk facing oncoming traffic and remain as far from the roadway as possible.
  • Stay alert for vehicles entering or exiting driveways and for cars backing out in parking lots

Even small safety habits-such as making eye contact with drivers, avoiding distractions from phones or headphones, and staying visible at night-can help prevent serious accidents.

 



Driver Awareness
Drivers also play a crucial role in keeping our community safe. During the spring months, motorists should expect to see more pedestrians, cyclists, and children playing near roadways.

Residential areas, parks, and school zones require extra attention. A moment of awareness and responsible driving can prevent a tragedy.

According to NHTSA, drivers can improve pedestrian safety by following these guidelines:

  • Always stay alert and watch for pedestrians everywhere.
  • Follow posted speed limits, especially in neighborhoods, schol zones, and areas where children may be present.
  • Be extra cautious when visibility is limited, such as during bad weather, early morning hours, nighttime, or when backing up your vehicle.
  • Yield to pedestrians in crosswalks and stop well back from the crossing area.
  • Never pass vehicles that have stopped for pedestrians at a crosswalk.
  • Never drive under the influence of alcohol or drugs.


Safe driving behaviors help create safer neighborhoods for everyone-from young children playing outside to older adults enjoying an afternoon walk.

 



Working Together for a Safer Community
Public safety is a shared responsibility. When pedestrians remain alert and drivers stay attentive, we create a safer environment for everyone who lives, works, and visits Parsons.

The Parsons Police Department remains committed to serving and protecting our community throughout every season of the year. Our officers continue to work proactively to keep our streets safe, respond to community concerns, and build strong relationships with the residents we proudly serve.

We encourage everyone to take advantage of the warmer weather, enjoy the outdoors, and spend time with family and friends-but always remember to make safety part of your plans.

 



Learn More
For additional information about pedestrian and roadway safety, please visit the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) website at:
https://www.nhtsa.gov 

 
If you ever have questions, concerns, or need assistance, please do not hesitate to contact the Parsons Police Department. Working together, we can ensure that this spring remains a season of growth, renewal, and safety for our entire community.

On behalf of the Parsons Police Department, I wish you a safe, enjoyable, and successful spring season.

Chief Robert L. Spinks
Parsons Police Department

multicolored flowers in a field


Policing as a Constitutional Trust

Pic of Dr King Jr with effective empathic and just policing logos

Policing as a Constitutional Trust: Remembering Dr. Martin Lurther King, Jr and the Policing Duty to Protect Human Dignity

By Robert Spinks, Chief of Police - Parsons, Kansas

With this week's holiday to remember Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. it invites our community and the nation to pause, not just on this past Monday but as we look forward into the new year of 2026, not simply to remember a historical figure, but to reflect on the moral responsibilities that accompany authority, power, and public service. That discussion is just as important today as it was in the 1960's.

In March of 1963, standing in Montgomery, Alabama, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered a speech that was both a moral appeal and a constitutional warning. He rejected "normalcy" when normal meant injustice. He challenged institutions to look beyond order and ask whether that order was fair, humane, and worthy of a democracy. More than sixty years later, his message remains especially relevant to policing.

Dr. King understood something fundamental about democratic government: legitimacy is not derived from power alone, but from the consent and trust of the governed. When government actors-including law enforcement-lose sight of human dignity, the system itself is weakened.

That truth applies to all policing-local, state, and federal.

Policing as a Constitutional Trust

In a constitutional republic, law enforcement is not an occupying force. Police authority is delegated by the people and constrained by the Constitution. Our role is not simply to enforce compliance, but to protect rights, preserve peace, and uphold justice under the rule of law.

Dr. King's critique of injustice was never anti-law enforcement. It was anti-abuse of power. He did not call for disorder; he called for accountability. He did not reject authority; he demanded that authority be exercised with conscience.

That distinction matters.

At the Parsons Police Department, we believe policing is most effective-and most legitimate-when it is empathetic, effective, and just. That belief is why our agency became the first law enforcement agency in Kansas accredited as a Peace Officer Agency through the Police2Peace.org framework.

This philosophy is not about doing less policing. It is about doing better policing.

Why Empathy Matters in Policing

Empathy in policing is often misunderstood. It is not sentimentality, hesitation, or weakness. It is awareness-of the human impact of police authority and the constitutional principles that guide its use.

The Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments presume that government actors will recognize the dignity of the individual. Empathetic policing ensures that discretion is exercised fairly, that encounters are guided by respect, and that enforcement decisions are proportional and lawful.

In a democracy:

  • People comply more readily when they believe they are treated fairly
  • Trust becomes a force multiplier for public safety
  • Communities cooperate when they feel heard rather than controlled

Dr. King understood that means shape outcomes. Policing that lacks empathy may achieve short-term compliance, but it erodes long-term legitimacy.

Effectiveness Requires Justice, Not Just Power

Too often, effectiveness in policing is reduced to numbers-arrests, citations, response times. Those metrics matter, but they are incomplete.

Effective policing is measured by whether:

  • Harm is prevented before it occurs
  • Conflict is resolved without unnecessary escalation
  • Public confidence is maintained during difficult moments

History has shown that systems relying on coercion rather than justice eventually fail. When enforcement appears arbitrary, disproportionate, or disconnected from community impact, it weakens trust and deepens division.

Dr. King warned against returning to a "normal" that tolerated suffering. In policing, we must be willing to ask the same hard question: If normal means mistrust, fear, or inequity, then normal is not acceptable.

Justice as the Foundation of Peace

Dr. King famously stated that "injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." For policing-particularly federal policing-this carries significant weight. Actions taken under federal authority send a national message about whether constitutional protections are consistent or conditional.

When any level of government tolerates unequal enforcement, disproportionate impact, or lack of accountability, it undermines democratic confidence. Conversely, just policing strengthens democracy by demonstrating that:

  • The law applies equally to all
  • Authority is exercised with restraint
  • Accountability is non-negotiable

This is why empathetic, effective, and just policing is not simply a best practice-it is a democratic necessity.

The Peace Officer Philosophy and Dr. King's Legacy

The Police2Peace philosophy aligns directly with Dr. King's vision. It recognizes that peace is not passive, authority must be morally grounded, and justice is inseparable from public safety.

Dr. King did not envision the absence of law enforcement. He envisioned law enforcement that served rather than subdued, protected rather than intimidated, and upheld dignity rather than eroded it.

In that sense, peace officer policing is not a modern invention. It is a return to constitutional first principles.

A Commitment Beyond Words

Dr. King reminded us that the arc of the moral universe bends toward justice-but only when institutions and individuals choose to bend with it.

On this Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday, the Parsons Police Department reaffirms its commitment to policing that honors dignity, earns trust, and strengthens peace. We believe public safety and human dignity are not competing values. They are inseparable.

Honoring Dr. King's legacy requires more than remembrance. It requires daily action-one interaction, one decision, one community at a time.

That is not idealism.
That is our constitutional duty.


Welcome to 2026 - A Year for Peace, Partnership and Personal Safety

A News Years Message with snow falling in the background

Welcome to 2026 - A Year for Peace, Partnership, and Personal Safety
By Chief Robert Spinks, MA, MS - Parsons Police Department

As we welcome 2026, I want to extend sincere best wishes for a safe, peaceful, and prosperous new year to every member of our Parsons community. The holiday season is a time of reflection, celebration, and renewal. I hope that each of you had an opportunity to be with family and friends, and that you enter this new year with optimism and purpose.

The arrival of a new year is more than a change on the calendar - it is an invitation to strengthen our commitments to one another and to the ideals that bind us as neighbors and as a community. In the weeks and months ahead, I encourage all residents to seize opportunities to be part of positive community change. Whether that means getting involved in neighborhood programs, attending community events, or simply looking out for one another, every act of engagement contributes to a safer and more connected Parsons.

As we head into 2026, your police department remains the most award-winning agency with recognition in community collaboration, traffic safety, policy management and training. In early 2026, the Parsons Police Department will complete accreditation through the Kansas Law Enforcement Accreditation Program (KLEAP), being one of only a dozen agencies to meet over 160 accreditation standards.

If current trends continue as we end 2025 and tally crime data, its looking like we may have drops in burglaries, thefts, and other crime categories.  

This time of year, also brings unique challenges. The current cold snap reminds us to take simple but important steps to protect your family and property. Please remember to:

Prepare your home for winter weather - ensure that heating systems are functioning properly, pipes are insulated, and walkways are clear of ice and snow.
• Drive with caution on cold, slick roads - winter weather can change conditions quickly, and safe driving requires reduced speed, increased following distance, and your full attention.

As we celebrate, let us do so responsibly. Festive gatherings and safe transitions into the new year help ensure that everyone arrives home safely. During the New Year's period, our officers will be out in force focused on traffic safety and impaired driving enforcement. Plan ahead: designate a sober driver, use a ride-sharing service, or arrange for a safe ride home. Driving sober and safely is one of the most important gifts you can give to your loved ones. 

Community safety is not solely the responsibility of law enforcement - it is a shared endeavor. I invite you to continue building partnerships with our department through open communication, active involvement, and mutual respect. Parsons PD leads the region in community outreach through radio/tv/newspapers along with social media, public events and presentations along with our quarterly Report to the Community that is in The Sun Newspaper. Together, we can uphold the peace and enhance the quality of life for all who live, work, and visit Parsons.

We will continue to invest in our philosophy of effective, empathic and just policing which has led our agency to be the only department in Kansas to be certified as a Peace Officer Accredited agency by Police2Peace.org

Thank you for your continued support and cooperation. Let us make 2026 a year of safety, service, and shared success.

Stay safe, stay engaged, and may this year be your best yet.


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Parsons Police 4th Qtr Community Report in THE SUN Newspaper


Christmas Concert - Sat, Dec 7th at 7pm - City Auditorium


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New Community Survey


Monthly Police Activity Report


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Parsons PD Monthly Report for March 2024


Parsons Police Monthly Report


Chief Spinks Interview on BIG HILL SMALL TALK Podcast


January Activity Report


Parsons Police is Hiring Officers & Dispatchers


End of 2023 Snapshot Review


Winter Driving and Crime Prevention Tips


New Year's Eve Safety Tips


NORAD Track Santa 2023


Free Gun Locks for the Holidays


Shop-With-A-Cop Needs You!


Shop With A Cop Needs You!


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K9 Karim Update


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Recruiting for Police Depatcher


August Monthly Activity Report


July Monthly Report


Big Hill Small Talk Podcast with Chief Spinks


MAY MONTHLY ACTIVITY REPORT


Mental Illness & Family Safety Nets


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