The Camas Police Department is marking the end of an era — and the beginning of a new one — this month with the retirement of longtime Camas Police Chief Mitch Lackey and the onboarding of the department’s new chief, Tina M. Jones.
“I know this is what everyone says, but I’ll miss the people. I’ll miss my coworkers … and the interactions at work,” Lackey told The Post-Record on Friday, July 7.
For Lackey, a lifelong Camas-Washougal resident who graduated from Washougal High School in 1978, and worked for The Columbian newspaper’s circulation department for a decade before joining the Camas police force as an officer in 1990, retirement has opened up a world of traveling — he and his wife, Carol, recently returned from a monthlong trip to Italy where they soaked up the culture in Umbria and took wine tours through Tuscany — working in his backyard and spending time with his family, which includes Carol, their two grown daughters, and four young grandchildren.
Despite the allure of retirement, saying goodbye to law enforcement, a career that first called to Lackey when he was still a Washougal High student, is bittersweet.
“I remember when a state trooper came to visit our high school. He was this big, 6-foot-7 guy in a Smokey Bear hat,” Lackey said, laughing. That visit piqued Lackey’s interest in law enforcement, and set him on a path that would include over three decades with the Camas Police Department, including more than 15 years as the department’s chief.