Page 1 - WORKING DRAFTApril 2021 PPIAC Newsletter Draft
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April 2021


                                           Chairman’s Message

                                           Welcome to spring, everyone, and welcome to our new members. PPIAC
                                           membership has slowly continued to grow during the pandemic. Please talk about
                                           our professional organization with non-member investigators you know or meet. If
                                           each one of our members brought another investigator to PPIAC this year, our
                                           membership in 2022 would include almost one third of all investigators in the
                                           state. That would help us tremendously with lobbying efforts we conduct on behalf
                                           of all professional investigators in Colorado.
      Index:
                                           If you haven't heard yet, DORA recently announced that our Colorado PI licenses
                                           will remain valid - and required - until 8/31/21. If you're planning to get licensed in
                                           another state before Colorado licensing sunsets, I suggest you don't
      Chairman’s Message                   procrastinate. While many states do not require testing or experience, most have
                                           an application approval period that takes months, not weeks.

                                           Finally, with the murders at King Soopers in Boulder last month still on my mind, I
      President’s Message                  want to share some experience-based advice on planning. When you're out of
                                           your house in the community, no matter where you are, practice looking for
                                           primary and alternate escape routes. It's usually not hard to quickly identify more
                                           than one way out of any public or private building. It's much harder to do the same
      VP of Training Update                thing quickly while under stress, especially during a life-or-death event like a fire or
                                           being shot at. It might even be impossible to identify exits if you're lying prone or
                                           hiding in order to avoid gunfire.

      VP of Membership                     Keep in mind that the closest exit might not be the safest, due either to its
      Update                               proximity to the danger or the amount of panicked people running toward it.

                                           Consider non-traditional exit points too, like going through a window; even one
                                           that was never meant to be opened. Throwing something through a floor-to-ceiling
      VP of Legislation Update             plate glass window to create an exit might be faster and safer for you than using
                                           the nearest pedestrian door. When it comes to personal safety, as with many
                                           things in life, it's better to have a plan and not need one than to need a plan and
                                           not have one. Stay safe out there. Aloha!
      Treasurer Update
                                           Sam Petitto - PPIAC Chairman of the Board
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