Photo Round-Up: Center for Adult Education Celebration

On June 12th, 2024, the Northern Essex Community College Center for Adult Education (CAE) held its annual Graduation & End-Of-Year Celebration, marking a significant milestone for students and honoring their hard work and perseverance. The event celebrated 150 students, which included 36 High School Equivalency Test (HiSET) graduates.

The program began with heartfelt and inspiring remarks from Dr. Paul Beaudin, Provost at Northern Essex Community College. Dr. Beaudin shared motivating personal stories, setting a positive and celebratory tone for the evening.

Two students then shared their perspectives. Harold Suero Gracia, the HiSET Valedictorian, shared his incredible journey of determination and success. Through unwavering commitment and perseverance, Harold achieved his High School Equivalency credential in under a year, showcasing his dedication to learning and personal growth.

The second student speaker, Jaronil Arvelo, shared his inspiring story of transformation. Beginning as an ESL student, Jaronil’s journey to enrolling at Northern Essex Community College began in the ESL program and he recently completed the Transition to College program. His journey, marked by resilience, exemplifies the Center for Adult Education’s mission to enhance the lives of students.

The ceremony also recognized many students for various accomplishments, including, achieving industry-recognized credentials and special awards and passing HiSET subtests.

Dr. Jacqueline Lynch, Executive Director of the Center for Adult Education, delivered closing remarks that resonated with pride and optimism. She reminded the audience that education is a lifelong journey that paves the way for a brighter future.

For more information about the Center for Adult Education programs, please visit the webpage or contact coordinator Sarah Pachano.

 

 

Northern Essex Athletics Finishes at Program Best 22nd in National Ranking

Haverhill, MA (June 25, 2024) – For the second consecutive season, the Northern Essex Community College Athletic Department has recorded a top 30 finish in the NATYCAA/Daktronics Cup standings announced last month at the annual NACDA Convention in Las Vegas, Nevada. The award recognizes the best of community and junior college athletics and was presented at the annual awards luncheon of the National Alliance of Two-Year College Athletic Administrators.

The Knights finished an all-time high 22nd place in the non-scholarship category with 36 points based upon team finishes at national championship tournaments. NECC was awarded 16 points for their 5th place finish in men’s basketball and 13.5 points for a 7th place finish in baseball. On the women’s side, NECC earned 6.5 points for a 13th-place finish in volleyball.

NECC was one of two New England schools to finish among the top 30 schools as they were joined by Community College of Rhode Island. Rowan College-South Jersey Gloucester captured the 2024 cup with a total of 152 points.

To learn more about varsity athletics at NECC, contact Athletics Director Dan Blair or visit the website.

Alumni Magazine Wins Global Circle of Excellence Award

Northern Essex Community College is proud to share that the Fall ’23 edition of its bi-annual alumni magazine, alumnecc, received a silver 2024 Circle of Excellence Award from the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE).

The issue focused on artificial intelligence and was among 4,223 global entries. A panel of 440 volunteer judges selected a total of 486 awardees in various categories.

alumnecc was honored in the Magazines | Alumni/General Interest (Two-Year Institutions) category. Judges said “The theme of AI was a highlight in a recent issue, with some stories effectively showcasing its relevance. The entertainment piece, for instance, was well-connected to AI through a color block. The magazine’s consistent and bold colors added visual appeal. Photos were used effectively to capture attention, and QR codes offered engaging additional content. The ‘Why I Hire’ and ‘NECC Helped Me Get There’ sections were particularly enjoyable, demonstrating the college’s lasting impact on students’ lives. Overall, the magazine provided a range of engaging features.”

The magazine is published jointly by NECC’s Alumni Relations and Marketing Communications Offices.

CASE’s Circle of Excellence Awards are the premier recognition program for educational advancement. These peer-selected and adjudicated awards celebrate colleges, universities, and schools worldwide whose talented staff have advanced their institutions with resourcefulness and ingenuity.

“As we mark CASE’s 50th anniversary this year, we are taking time to celebrate our members across the globe,” says Sue Cunningham, CASE President and CEO. “Examples of their remarkable work are evident throughout the Circle of Excellence Awards. We applaud the achievements and innovation of advancement professionals across all sectors and all regions—work in schools, colleges and universities that advances education and thereby transforms lives and society.”

This year volunteer judges from CASE’s membership selected 486 exemplary entries for bronze, silver, gold, and Grand Gold recognition. Winners are chosen for overall quality, innovation, use of resources, and the impact on the institution or its communities, such as alumni, parents, students, faculty, and staff.

About CASE:

The Council for Advancement and Support of Education is a global nonprofit association dedicated to educational advancement—alumni relations, communications, development, marketing, and advancement services—and championing education to transform lives and society.

To fulfill their missions and to meet both individual and societal needs, colleges, universities and independent schools rely on and therefore must foster the goodwill, active involvement, informed advocacy and enduring support of alumni, donors, prospective students, parents, government officials, community leaders, corporate executives, foundation officers, and other external constituencies.

CASE’s membership includes more than 3,000 colleges, universities, and independent elementary and secondary schools in more than 80 countries, making CASE one of the largest nonprofit education associations in the world in terms of institutional membership. CASE serves more than 90,000 advancement professionals at member institutions and has offices in London, UK; Mexico City, Mexico; Singapore; and Washington, D.C., USA. The association produces content, publications, conferences, institutes, and workshops that support educational leaders and advancement professionals in their work to advance education through serving their institutions. To learn more about CASE visit www.case.org.

Home court advantage: A playbook for investing in athletics at community colleges

This viewpoint originally appeared in CC Daily on June 20, 2024. Written by Lane Glenn and Mike McCarthy.


 

When the #3 nationally ranked Northern Essex Community College (NECC) men’s basketball team hosted the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) Region 21 Championship Tournament in front of standing-room-only crowds this spring, the starting five hoopsters for the NECC Knights included Dominican players from the immigrant cities of Lawrence and Lowell, Massachusetts, alongside a trio of teammates from Germany, France and Japan.

The rest of the Knights’ 18-man roster included three French forwards, a guard from Turkey, and a 6’8” center from Cameroon who arrived in the United States in a shipping container, fleeing conflict in his home country and receiving a temporary protected status from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

What might seem like an unlikely collection of competitors on the court of a small New England community college is actually part of a planned, rapidly growing, increasingly successful athletics program seven years in the making.

A win streak

At a time when colleges across the country have been downsizing or entirely eliminating athletics programs, NECC has recognized the tremendous benefits intercollegiate sports offer, and since 2017 has been investing in adding teams, growing enrollment, exciting local fans and, most of all, fulfilling our mission by opening doors of opportunity for academic and career success for hundreds of student-athletes.

NECC volleyball team

Between 2017 and 2024, Northern Essex Community College grew its athletics program from six sports and 46 athletes to 14 sports and 178 athletes.

The results speak for themselves:

  • Between 2017 and 2024, NECC expanded from six sports and 46 athletes to 14 sports and 178 athletes.
  • During a seven-year period when overall college enrollment fell by nearly 20%, the number of student-athletes almost quadrupled, making up for nearly $1 million in revenue each year.
  • Four NECC teams — men’s basketball, baseball and soccer, and women’s volleyball — reached national rankings in 2023, with three finding their way to NJCAA national championship competitions.
  • Last year, for the first time ever, NECC’s athletics program reached the Top 30 (28th place overall) in the National Alliance of Two-Year College Athletic Administrators (NATYCAA) Daktronics Cup standings, which recognizes colleges that accomplish the most overall success with their athletics programs.
  • The college has built a thriving Academic Coaching Center, with a strong focus on student-athletes, that has helped improve their persistence, retention and completion rates: In 2023, 100% of NECC’s student-athletes remained academically eligible for the entire year.
  • Building on the success of these programs, the college is embarking on a multimillion-dollar public-private partnership to build a new health and wellness center on campus and upgrade our outdoor track, along with our baseball, softball and soccer fields; and we are exploring options for dormitories to house our growing out-of-state and international student population.

Our players aren’t in it for the money. In Division III, athletes aren’t eligible for scholarships, our games aren’t televised and, so far, none of our players are cashing in on the NJCAA’s new “Name, Image, and Likeness” earnings opportunities.

They are here for the exercise, for the love of the game, the camaraderie, a quality education and preparation for a good career.

And because we want all that for student-athletes everywhere, we’re glad to share a few pages from our playbook that may be helpful for other community colleges with a vision for athletic excellence.

Leadership matters

One of us is the college’s president who also happens to be an adventure athlete, competing in ultramarathon relays and obstacle course races, climbing mountains around the world, and starting the NECC President’s Running Club for students and employees.

And the other is the college’s chief financial and operating officer who grew up playing team sports, is still dedicated to physical fitness and recognizes he wouldn’t be where he is today without the coaches he had and the education he received thanks to athletics.

Both of us emphasize the importance of athletics to our college at every opportunity, show up at games to cheer on our student-athletes, and include our athletics program in planning processes for staffing, facilities, enrollment management and, most importantly, student success. Through our words, our actions and our allocation of resources, we demonstrate our commitment to a high-quality student athletics program at NECC.

Leadership from the top can certainly make a difference, but you don’t have to be your college’s president, or an athlete yourself, to help lead the way.

Get informed about the benefits of a strong athletics program for enrollment, campus engagement and student success. Create an exciting vision for what it can mean for your college and recruit a team of supporters, including senior leaders, to help.

It’s a marathon, not a sprint

Like most public community colleges, our budget, our facilities and the salaries we offer are all modest.  However, our vision for our athletics program is enormous. So, we pace ourselves. It has taken NECC seven years to significantly grow the number of our teams and athletes and to accomplish some of our recent regional and national success, and we still have a long way to go.

We began in 2017 by hiring a top-notch athletic director from a nearby Division II university who shared our vision for growing a nationally competitive community college athletics program and impressed us with a concrete plan for making it happen. We already had a talented baseball team with a long-time coach that was regularly punching their ticket to the NJCAA World Series most years, and women’s volleyball and men’s basketball teams that were beginning to find regional success.

To expand opportunities for student-athletes, we started off slowly, bringing both men’s and women’s golf back to the college in 2018-19 after a 20-year hiatus. Then, during the 2019-20 season, we brought men’s soccer and women’s basketball back to the college, and added, for the first time, eSports (with a team that won the NJCAA National Rocket League Championship in its inaugural season).

Men’s and women’s cross country and track and field are sports that, at a relatively small community college, often seem to come and go depending on student interest and coach availability; but in seasons past, we’ve had nationally ranked runners, and since 2022, we have found our groove again with newly hired coaches and a growing roster of athletes.

Building campus excitement

While adding these teams and recruiting more players both locally and internationally, we also gradually built more awareness and excitement across our campuses for student athletics. For example, our athletic director creates a business plan for each new sport we add, and we transparently share investments we are making in athletics with our faculty and staff and show returns in the form of increased enrollment and student retention.

We work with our student-athletes to make sure they are visible ambassadors for the college, attending campus events and contributing to volunteer projects like food delivery and, after a devastating earthquake struck Turkey, home to some our basketball players, last year, leading an emergency donation drive that sent hundreds of pounds of clothing, tents, blankets and more.

Our student-athletes have become some of our most effective recruiters: on an annual basis, about 25% of our student-athlete population transfers into NECC from other colleges and universities, thanks to word-of-mouth about an athletics program devoted to excellence and support for students both on and off the playing field.

As you think about your vision for your own athletics program, be mindful of resources and other campus interests competing for them, and prepare to build over time, demonstrating wins along the way.

Play to your strengths

One of NECC’s campuses is in downtown Lawrence, Massachusetts, known since its founding in the middle of the 19th century as the “Immigrant City,” because of the waves of Italian, Polish and Lebanese workers who migrated to America to work in industrial mills along the Merrimack River. In more recent decades, the population has become predominantly Hispanic, as people have moved there from the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Cuba and countries in Central and South America.

The NECC Knights on the field in the Dominican Republic, where they played exhibition games against the Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo.
With this kind of history, international student recruitment comes naturally to us. And, since a third of our students are Dominican, it also helps that baseball is the national pastime of the Dominican Republic, the country that has given us players like David Ortiz, Pedro Martinez and Sammy Sosa.

NECC baseball team posing with family and friends in the DR

The NECC Knights on the field in the Dominican Republic, where they played exhibition games against the Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo.

To celebrate this international connection, last fall the NECC Knights traveled to the Dominican Republic, where they played exhibition games against the Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo and the Universidad Central del Este and visited some of our players’ families in their hometowns.

We may all play by the same rules, but every team that takes to the field or the court is different. Consider your college’s unique qualities — its history, geography, student demographics and more — when building your athletics program.

Celebrate school spirit

By now, pictures and video recordings of NECC Knights teams and players have been featured countless times on Instagram, Facebook and TikTok, and in local and regional publications; but one of everyone’s favorite images is actually of Academic Coach Gretchyn Gallagher cutting down the net after the men’s basketball team won the Region 21 Championship at Holyoke Community College in March 2023, and the players chanted her name until she climbed the ladder to do the honor.

PHOTO: NECC Academic Coach Gretchyn Gallagher cuts the net at the NJCAA East Regional Tournament.

NECC Academic Coach Gretchyn Gallagher cuts the net at the NJCAA East Regional Tournament.

The athletics program at NECC is, first and foremost, about creating opportunities and success for student-athletes. It’s also about creating community and school spirit, a stronger sense of belonging for all of our students, players and fans alike, and for our faculty, staff, and people in the communities we serve.

Over time, we have built promotion and celebration of our teams and players into the routines of our marketing and communications staff, who regularly use college social media channels and our online NECC Newsroom to share images and updates about the Knights.

We look for opportunities to create “buzz” around our teams whenever we can. For example, this year’s NJCAA Men’s Basketball season started on November 1, 2023, so the NECC Knights played the first game in the country against the Bunker Hill Community College Bulldogs in a special “Midnight Madness” matchup in front of a packed fieldhouse on Halloween.

We have transformed the walls of our Sport and Fitness Center into a celebration of the history of NECC Knights teams and outstanding athletes, and in 2019 we created the Northern Essex Community College Athletics Hall of Fame by inducting 2010-11 women’s track and field NJCAA National Champion Noelia Figuereo and the 1970-71 Eastern Conference Champion men’s basketball team. The induction ceremony has become a popular annual dinner, with athletes and their families from decades ago returning to campus to celebrate with and inspire today’s players.


Dr. Lane A. Glenn is president of Northern Essex Community College.

Michael McCarthy is the college’s vice president of administration and finance and chief operating officer.

Change of Plans Leads to Change of Heart for Liberal Arts Major 

When Ella Suchecki ’24 was a senior at Newburyport High School, she found herself with a tough decision to make. Her hard work and talent earned her acceptances at two selective schools: Salve Regina University in Newport, Rhode Island, and Connecticut College in New London, Connecticut.
After much consideration, she chose Connecticut College. But, she says, once she got there in early August 2022, she realized it wasn’t what she was expecting.

“I went for two weeks. It just didn’t fit. I felt like the values didn’t align with mine and I wasn’t interested in the classes because as freshmen, we got last choice. I begged my parents to let me come home.”

Liberal Arts major Ella Suchecki is a talented musician who often plays in and around Newburyport.

Before she was even fully moved out, Suchecki was thinking of her next steps.

“I had already applied to Northern Essex. I knew it was close to home and I could easily commute there.”

She says she was also excited to learn she could take the classes she wanted right away. This led her to envision a whole new career path for herself.

“I always thought I’d be a biology major. I grew up around that and was interested in it. But then I took a history class at NECC. It really made me fall in love with history and sparked a new passion.”

This winter, Suchecki supplemented her history courses with an internship at the Museum of Old Newbury. She still works there three days a week, scanning negatives, helping catalog items, and giving tours.

As she approached her final semester at NECC, Suchecki was once again thinking about her next steps. Though she says this time, the decision was much easier.

“I realized I always wanted to go to Salve [Regina]”

Suchecki reactivated her original application and coordinated with NECC and the admissions office at Salve Regina. She not only learned that all her credits would transfer seamlessly, but that she was eligible for several scholarships due to her involvement with the Phi Theta Kappa Honors Society and National Society of Leadership and Success at NECC.

Suchecki graduated with her associate degree in Liberal Arts from NECC this spring with a near-perfect GPA. She will be a junior at Salve Regina when she starts classes there in the fall. She plans to major in American History and says she may consider law school after she earns her bachelor’s degree. Reflecting now on the past two years, Suchecki credits NECC with helping her discover the right path for her.

“I met such great professors. And I felt like I could explore different majors and figure out what I wanted to do. It really changed my whole perspective.”

To learn more about transfer programs at NECC visit the webpage.

Board of Trustees June 2024 Update 

Haverhill, MA (June 5, 2024) – Each meeting of the Northern Essex Community College Board of Trustees typically starts with the introduction of new employees. At the June meeting, that included Winnie, the college’s comfort dog-in-training. Winnie, along with her new, two-legged colleagues received a package of NECC-themed goodies and a brief introduction to the Board and how it operates.

Winnie graciously accepts her new employee gifts.

New Trustees Welcomed 
Though Winnie is a tough act to follow, the meeting also included a formal introduction of the Board’s newest members: Age-Span CEO Joan Hatem-Roy and former Essex County Sheriff Frank Cousins, Jr. Both have been involved with the college for many years. Cousins is an alumnus and previously served on the NECC Foundation Board. Hatem-Roy taught evening classes and has partnered with the college on various initiatives in her time at AgeSpan.

Commonwealth Honors Program 
Assistant Provost, Academic & Student Affairs Sharon McDermot and Professor of English & Commonwealth Honors Program Coordinator Ginger Hurajt updated the Board on the efforts to grow the program at NECC. This fall, the college is offering 11 honors courses across the Lawrence and Haverhill Campuses. That’s more than double the offerings just two years ago.

“It’s been really exciting to see this expansion and offer students on both campuses the opportunity to take honors classes,” shared McDermot.

This fall semester there will also be an honors lounge on the Lawrence Campus for students to connect and work on projects together.

Any student can register and take honors classes regardless of GPA. However, students who take three honors classes and maintain a GPA of at least 3.2 will be designated as members of the Commonwealth Honors Program (CHP). That means if they transfer to a state university, they’re automatically enrolled in the Commonwealth Honors program there, and their honors courses transfer easily.

A committee from the CHP recently visited NECC to review its program. They were impressed with their findings and renewed the program’s accreditation through 2031.

“They consider the honors program to be a vibrant part of the campus community,” said McDermot.

Not Goodbye, See You Soon 
This meeting marked the last for NECC’s Cheryl Goodwin. Goodwin has worked in the President’s Office for 15 years – but has been a part of the NECC community in various capacities for 40 years. Goodwin plans to retire in January 2025 and is passing the baton to President Glenn’s new Chief of Staff Chris Sicuranza. Sicuranza will take over Goodwin’s duties related to the Board of Trustees when they resume meeting in the fall.

“We want to say to you that you are one amazing person- you have been the utmost professional, you are always there for every one of the trustees – you are highly invested in the school, and it shows,” said NECC Board Chairwoman Jennifer Borislow. “We all adore and love you and are super excited for your next chapter.”

‘Encounter the Real’ Photography Exhibit Coming to the Lawrence Campus 

Lawrence, MA (June 6, 2024) – Seven local artists are coming together to create a powerful new photography exhibit called Encounter the Real – Emotive Reflections. It will be displayed in Louise Haffner Fournier Education Center on Northern Essex Community College’s Lawrence Campus at 78 Amesbury Street starting June 15.

The show was the brainchild of Kat Almonte and Mahli Rivera, owners of Grainy Daze Studios in Lawrence. As Rivera was working to submit pieces to another show, she said she reflected on the time and money it took just to have her work seen.

Kat Almonte and Mahli Rivera, owners of Grainy Daze Studio

“I realized how impactful it would be if someone had the opportunity to create artwork without the funding,” she said. She and Almonte expanded on that idea, which they brought to life using a grant from the Lawrence Cultural Council, a local agency which is supported by the Mass Cultural Council.

“We wanted an opportunity for marginalized people to be able to have a space and opportunity to gain skills and work on their passions,” added Almonte.

Through an open call for submissions, they selected five artists– representing BIPOC women/non-binary/LGBTQ+ perspectives– to create the show alongside them. The group has been working since April to produce Encounter the Real – Emotive Reflections. Almonte and Rivera provided each artist with studio space and all seven of them get together every other Sunday to discuss the show.

The result is what they describe as a showcase of the artists’ “essence of emotions and spirituality and what that means to them through their lens.” All the works are created using 35mm film, which Almonte and Rivera developed and processed in their studio.

The NECC Connection 

When she’s not busy creating art and exhibits, Almonte also happens to be a Northern Essex student. The General Studies: Art and Design major first came to the college in 2010 but took some time off for personal reasons. They returned in 2019 and met Dianne Pappas, an NECC adjunct art & design faculty member, during an online class. “I fell in love with her class – teaching inspirational art. It was just a great experience.”

Pappas has her own studio just down the hall from Grainy Daze and when Almonte told her about the upcoming show, Pappas suggested they host it on NECC’s Lawrence Campus. Pappas helped secure the space and NECC’s Liberal Arts Division agreed to be a sponsor of the show.

Encounter the Real- Emotive Reflections opens on June 15 with a reception from 4 to 8 pm. It will run until June 30th and then move to three other locations throughout Lawrence this summer. The Gallery at the Louise Haffner Fournier Education Center is open to the public June 16 – 29 10 am-6 pm.

For more information, visit the Grainy Daze website.

Spring 2024 Dean’s List

Congratulations to the Northern Essex Community College students on the Spring 2024 Dean’s List!

To be included, students must attain a grade point average of 3.3 or higher within the term, carry six or more credits within the term, and be matriculated in a degree program.

View the Spring 2024 Dean’s List

Northern Essex Community College, the first Federally designated Hispanic Serving Institution in New England, is an education leader for the Merrimack Valley. Through a supportive learning environment and cultural inclusion, NECC embraces all identities and inspires initiative and excellence through top-notch affordable certificate and associate degree programs online and at campuses in Haverhill and Lawrence. NECC offers many bachelor’s degree transfer options, workforce development, and community education classes, and is host to the NECC Police Academy, MassHire Merrimack Valley, and Gallaudet University’s Regional Center for the deaf and hard of hearing. Visit Northern Essex online at necc.edu.

NECC Basketball Standout Selected in Second Round of Dominican National League Draft

Haverhill, MA (June 6, 2024) – Two-time NJCAA First Team All-American Luis Reynoso (Lawrence) of the Northern Essex Community College men’s basketball team was selected in the second round and 16th overall in the Dominican National League Draft held on Wednesday evening at the Hard Rock Café in Santo Domingo.

Reynoso, selected by the Santiago Metros with the 16th pick, was among a total of 56 players drafted in the seven-round event among the eight teams in the LNB La Liga. The Super League season is set to get underway on June 18th.

Reynoso who helped lead the Knights to their second consecutive Region 21/East District Championship became the first player in the history of the Knights basketball program to earn two All-American awards and is just the fourth athlete in the Northern Essex athletic program to earn the recognition twice.

He scored 614 points on the season and became the first Knight to score 1,000 career points since Joe Marshall in 2001 as he finished his two-year career on the Haverhill campus with 1,244 points

While averaging 26.6 minutes played per game, Reynoso led the team in scoring (19.8 ppg), rebounds (13.2 rbg), blocks (1.6 bpg) and assists (4.5apg).

At the regional level, Reynoso was first in rebounding and tied for first in free throws made (126) while he ranked fourth in points per game.

On the national level, Reynoso finished third with 278 defensive rebounds and fourth in total rebounds with 408. He finished fifth in rebounds per game at 13.2 and seventh in total points (614).

This article was written by NECC Athletics Director Dan Blair. To learn more about athletics at NECC, visit the website

Summer Classes Going to the Dogs

Haverhill, MA (June 4, 2024) – Northern Essex Community College’s comfort dog Winnie got a glimpse into her future on Tuesday. She was joined on the Haverhill Campus by comfort dogs from eight law enforcement agencies for a meet and greet sponsored by the Essex County Sheriff’s Department.

Tuesday’s event was the first of three of these gatherings, which will include training for the officers and dogs, and will culminate in an obedience competition in the fall. Essex County Sheriff’s Department Captain Laura Dow and the Department’s facility dog handler Officer Christian Guzman spearheaded the effort to bring these dogs together.

Winnie welcomed her new friends

“It’s a way for us to all to come together, to share stories and lessons learned, and see how we can best work together to share our comfort dogs with our communities in the best way possible,” said Dow, who also heads the Department’s K9 Unit. “There’s a lot of camaraderie among K9 officers and we want to continue to foster these relationships.”

Comfort dogs have become an integral part of community policing and are often found helping in schools or care facilities, said Essex County Sheriff Kevin F. Coppinger. He said this event was done to support these officers and dogs, as well as to provide some free training.

For Coppinger, the decision to add a comfort dog to the Department was about helping Essex County communities, but also about taking care of employees.

“Being in law enforcement comes with unavoidable stress. When these dogs walk into our facilities, it lessens the burden a bit. It gives an officer who may be feeling overwhelmed a chance to breathe and receive a little love from a happy dog,” Sheriff Coppinger said. “It’s about officer wellness, but it’s also a way for us to support our communities and bring these comfort dogs out in times of need, especially when tragedy strikes.”

Charles Young of Professional Canine Services of Middleborough provided training at Tuesday’s event. The trainings are made possible by a grant from Essex County Outreach, a collaborative effort of Essex County law enforcement agencies and the Essex County Sheriff’s Department to combat substance use disorders and mental health matters.

“This was a great event for all of us and our dogs,” said Officer Guzman. “This is such a great crew of officers and these dogs are just the best. They can’t help but make you smile.”

Attending the training were:

Essex County Sheriff’s Department Officer Christian Guzman and partner Pasky
Peabody Police SRO Eric Ricci and partner Ella
Rockport Police SRO Mike Anderson and partner Luna
Gloucester Police SRO Pete Sutera and partner Ace
Manchester-by-the-Sea Police SRO Andrea Locke and partner Daisy
Northern Essex Community College Police Lt. Keith Walker and partner Winnie
Massachusetts State Police Trooper Chad Tata and partner Luna
Swampscott Police SRO Brian Wilson and partner Sora
Hamilton Police Officer Michael Girolimon and partner Luca

Winnie officially joined the NECC family in April as a 9-week-old puppy. Once her training is complete, she will provide stress relief, calm nerves, and bring cheer to students, faculty, and staff.

Information about Winnie, her schedule (once she’s fully entered service), and more will be available on her webpage. Her adventures are also documented on her Instagram page: @neccwinnie.