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Goffstown News

News and Information for the Town of Goffstown

French remembered for dedication to officers, town

BY STEPHEN BEALE

This week marked a changing of the guard at the Goffstown Police Department.

Monday, March 31, Michael French served the last day of a 34-year career in law enforcement and saw the end of his tenure as chief. Lt. Pat Sullivan became the chief law enforcement officer in Goffstown the next day.

French was driven home in a police cruiser on Monday. As he made his final exit, officers and other department staff lined the back driveway at the police station, standing at attention and saluting him.

“It’s mixed emotions, anxious to begin a chapter but also nervous about leaving something behind I’ve done continuously in one place for 34 and some odd years,” French said in a prior interview.

Before his departure, staff at the Police Department remembered French for his dedication as chief and his commitment to the community.

“Chief French is a driven individual,” Sullivan said. “But the department and the community comes first.”

During the chaos of the first of what ended up being two 100- year storms, Sullivan remembers one constant at the Police Department: Chief Michael French.

The day the flooding began in May 2006, Sullivan began his shift at 7 in the evening. As the emergency management director for the town, French was already at the department and was still there when Sullivan’s shift ended at 7 the following morning. French had not left after 24 hours, when Sullivan resumed his next shift the following evening.

Selectman Phil D’Avanza said he looked up to French for his leadership during the crisis. The moment stands out in a career that spans more than 34 years.

In his nine years as chief, he rarely took time off, according to Denise Roberge, his secretary. When he did take personal vacations, it was often to work for the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, she said.

It was common to see him around the department during holidays, she added. For New Year’s Eve, French had a tradition of buying Chinese food for all the staff on duty, and his wife usually brought pumpkin pancakes over Thanksgiving morning, according to Roberge.

Every summer, French took one week off to work as the resident director at Camp Fatima, a facility in the Gilmanton Iron Works area for children and young adults who have physical or mental challenges.

He is also known for his involvement in the local community. “He had his hands in everything in this community,” Roberge said. “Mike French had his finger on the pulse of the community.”

In addition to membership in the Rotary Club, French was president of Goffstown Junior Baseball and served on the board of directors for Crispin’s House, an organization for youth and families, which he will now lead as interim executive director. In the fall, he would captain the pumpkin boat the Goffstown Police Association sponsored in the annual giant pumpkin regatta on the Piscataquog River.

Among his accomplishments as chief, French said he was proud that he had recruited and kept quality officers, established the Community Emergency Response Team and brought back the K-9 program.

He has also been the point man for getting the department through the accreditation process, even before he became chief. The department was the first one in New Hampshire to be accredited, according to D’Avanza.

As a chief, French was active in the day-to-day operations of his department and had not forgotten what it was like to be an officer on the street, Roberge said. “Chief French is a handson, cop’s cop,” she said.

When major calls came into the department, she said French often would be one of the first officers on the scene. Sullivan remembers French spending all night with him investigating a fatal accident on Wallace Road a few years ago.

During her 26 years at the department, Roberge said she had seen French rise through the ranks, after starting out as a dispatcher. “It’s hard to sum up 26 years in half an hour,” she said in an interview. “You can’t really say everything that needs to be said about this man.”

His last official duty as chief came in the evening on Monday, when he was scheduled to attend a swearing-in ceremony at the town hall for patrol officers Lee Korthas and Geoffrey Pinard.

Asked what he would miss most about the Police Department, French had a simple answer.

“People,” he said.

Published Wednesday, April 02, 2008 4:54 PM by Goffstown Editor

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