SCPD Unites Narcan Training with Purple Rock Project at Bay Shore Alive at 5, Training Over 220 People

LongIsland.com

Combines education with healing for parents who have lost children to O.D. & Fentanyl.

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Here members of the SCPD conduct the Narcan trainings alongside a “memorial rocks and informational” station run by the Purple Rock Project. From left are Police Officer Jesse Levy; Sergeant Joseph Steigele; Police Officer Gina Lauricella; Police Officer Bridget Topping; SCPD Emergency Medical Service Officers Jason Byron and Alex Trzepizur; and Police Officers Jesse Levy. Credit: Carole Trottere

The Suffolk County Police Department and the Purple Rock Project joined together on August 13 at Bay Shore’s Alive at 5 street event and trained more than 220 people in the use of Naloxone (Narcan) and distributed 450 doses of the life-saving antidote to opioid overdose.

SCPD Emergency Medical Service Officers Jason Byron and Alex Trzepizur conducted the Narcan trainings alongside a “memorial rocks and informational” station run by Purple Rock Project founder and parent Carole Trottere. The Purple Rock Project (PRP) supplies purple painted rocks to that can be inscribed with the name of a loved one lost to overdose. The rocks are then exhibited at the Suffolk County Environmental Center at the Scully Estate, Tree Memorial and Serenity Garden, 550 South Bay Avenue, Islip and other locations as a reminder of how many Long Islanders have died from O.D. and fentanyl poisonings. 

“Writing a child’s name on a rock may seem like a small thing, but I think it is a way of saying to the world that their child was once here,” said Trottere, who lost her son Alex in 2018. “One young woman said she had so many names to write on a rock that she “ran out of room.”

Throughout the Alive at 5 event attendees were educated about Narcan and the risks associated with illicit drug use.  Byron also talked to many young teens and adults about the 911 Good Samaritan Law, which allows people to call 911 without fear of arrest if they are having a drug or alcohol overdose that requires emergency medical care or if they witness someone overdosing. Sergeant Joseph Steigele and Police Officers Jesse Levy and Karl Allison from SCPD Community Relations Bureau from Community Relations Bureau were also on hand to help with the Narcan training and answer questions.

The Behavioral Health Unit, Sgt. Christopher Ingoglia, Police Officer Bridget Topping and Police Officer Gina Lauricella, assisted with the distribution of the Narcan.

Look for the Narcan training table and The Purple Rock Project at:

Alive at 5 in Bay Shore on Aug. 20

If you are interested in sponsoring a community event, contact the Community Relations Bureau at SCPDCRB@suffolkcountyny.gov

If you have lost a loved one to O.D. or fentanyl poisoning, and you would like to incorporate a Narcan training into a memorial event for your child, or loved one, please contact Police Officer Bridget Topping at bridget.topping@suffolkcountyny.gov

For more information about The Purple Rock Project visit our Facebook page.