Rich Cooper


Washington
,
Mar 30, 2009
 

One of the greatest rewards in life is the people you meet and the things they teach you along the way.  I’ve been more than fortunate throughout my career to work with some amazing people.  They have ranged from gifted engineers and scientists who have built technologies and programs to improve life on Earth; to leaders and innovators who have made tremendous differences (large and small) to the every day lives of people and communities in which they live.  

On Friday afternoon, one of those amazing people passed away.  His name was Matt Simeone.  

I first met Matt in 2004 during a business trip to the greater New York City area when I was working for DHS’ Private Sector Office.  At the time, Matt and several of his fellow officers in the Nassau County Police Department were building one of the country’s first public-private sector information sharing networks.  It was called the Security/Police Information Network (SPIN) and it was Matt’s job to lead the team of police officers to put the program in place.

While Matt may have spent his entire career as a police officer serving the people of Long Island on patrol, combating gangs, serving as a police academy instructor and more, he understood that any effective information sharing network in a post 9/11 world had to do more than just talk to cops.  It had to talk to businesses, community and civic associations as well as citizens in the community.  Such a network also had to have relevant and timely information being exchanged as expeditiously as possible.  

Most importantly, Matt and his colleagues knew that their network had to be a two-way street of give and take between its various users while allowing for other outside avenues (other law enforcement agencies; regional groups, etc.) to connect into it should a need or emergency arise.   To Matt and his SPIN Team, everyone had to get the information they needed to do their respective jobs.

In applying the principles of community policing to create this first of its type tool for Nassau County, Matt and his team did something very novel in building their information sharing network.  They actually went out and listened to the very constituencies they wanted to engage.  

Rather than simply create the requirements for SPIN on a white board at police headquarters, build it and impose it upon others, Matt and his team engaged business interests, civic groups and community stakeholders throughout Nassau County and the surrounding areas to forge their information sharing network.  While building that network, something else happened along the way.  A newfound sense of trust, respect and relationships developed amongst the diverse stakeholders with the Nassau County Police Department and that allowed the SPIN Program to generate success almost from the beginning of its operations.

Matt’s collaborative leadership style – always end-goal focused and believing in person-to-person contact were a perfect match for an inventive and dynamic information system.  He also understood that while the 9/11 attacks that claimed many of his County’s residents occurred just West of Nassau in lower Manhattan, there was still an inherent role and responsibility for his police department to be ready for that scale of emergency, as well as the smaller scale ones that occur every day in the form of violent crime, robberies and so forth.  

He recognized that key to any successful homeland security operation was having effective and informed relationships.  Those were established by effective information sharing where each user could take shared details and react and respond accordingly.  Matt wanted to be sure Nassau County was ready with such a resource.

He succeeded.
about the need for DHS’ Information and Analysis efforts to be led by someone with real state and local law enforcement experience.  Someone (in her words) who could directly speak to the needs of “front-line first responders” when it came to information sharing and more.  

I couldn’t help but think of Matt when she made those remarks.  For me, Matt Simeone was the model of the leader she spoke of and all anyone had to do was look at what’s in place and operating in Nassau County today to see the proof.

Matt’s passing as a result of cancer this past week robs his family of a dear loved one but further robs the nation and his community of his continued leadership on information sharing and other issues.  His legacy of service though will continue to serve his community on Long Island, his ‘own homeland’ and more for years to come.

That’s a metric any person can be proud.  To those of us who mourn his loss, it is a metric that we should all continue to aspire to fulfill.  That’s what Matt’s life of service taught us and it is just one of the lessons he would want us to carry forward for Nassau County and beyond.

To learn more Matt’s work with SPIN see the following June 2006 profile from Security Management Magazine by ASIS International

Funeral Information for Inspector Matthew J. Simeone, Jr.

Moloney’s Hauppauge Funeral Home
840 Wheeler Road (RTE. 111) Hauppauge, NY.  
Visitation Tuesday & Wednesday 2:00-5:00PM & 7:00-10:00PM
 
Funeral Mass – Thursday, April 2, 2009 at 11:00AM at St. Joseph R.C. Church, Kings Park, New York
 
In lieu of flowers the family requests donations be made to:
 
The Pancreas and Biliary Center, St. Vincent’s Hospital, 170 West 12th St., New York, NY 10011. For ways of giving see the following link
 

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