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INSIDE
New deputy
looking to head off trouble before it gets out of hand
By Meg Olson
Ryan Monogue
wanted to be a sheriff’s deputy because he
relished the challenge of handling all aspects of law enforcement,
often solo.
“You have to approach people differently. You need more
tact,” said the newest deputy stationed on the Point. “You
kind of need to be a jack-of-all-trades.”
The 32-year-old
Monogue has been with the Whatcom County Sheriff’s
Office for one-and-a-half years, after spending six years with
the Ocean Shores police department. Prior to that he was with
the Latah County sheriff’s office near Moscow, Idaho
for three years after earning a bachelor’s degree in
social science from Washington State University.
Originally
from Portland, Oregon, Monogue has a wife and two children
aged five and three. The family will make their home in Point
Roberts during the two years the deputy is stationed here,
but it won’t be in the traditional fenced compound
on South Beach Road: the sheriff’s department is renting
accommodation while the older of the two manufactured homes
is replaced and changes are made to the layout of the property. “One
of the things they’re looking at is an office to breach
that perimeter,” Monogue said.
Sheriff
Bill Elfo has said the bleak housing offered to deputies is
a deterrent for volunteers. “I was informed I was a
volunteer,” Monogue said wryly. While stationed in
Point Roberts, Monogue will continue to be a member of
the county’s
new special response team, for which he is a firearms instructor.
Point
Roberts has a lot in common with Ocean Shores, Monogue
said: seasonal visitors, vacation properties, an emphasis
on recreation. For law enforcement, the problems are
similar. “In
Ocean Shores the big problems ended up being all alcohol
related – DUI,
disturbances,” he said. “If those things get
out of hand they create more problems. I’m not trying
to ruin everyone’s fun but let’s keep things
from getting out of control.”
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