Rising to the challenge

GAVC students participate in law enforcement obstacle course

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Fifteen students from Morris, Coal City, Minooka and Gardner-South Wilmington participated in the Illinois National Guard Law Enforcement Challenge last week through their class at the Grundy Area Vocational Center. (Photos provided)
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It was all in a day’s work for 15 area high students – running three miles carrying 25-pound backpacks, ducking grenades, crawling under barbed wire, scaling a seven-and-a-half foot wall, rescuing a hostage from armed bad guys, and even pulling a wounded officer through gunfire to safety.

Grundy Area Vocational Center criminal justice students did those very things last week at the first Illinois National Guard Law Enforcement Challenge, and they took second place over eight other vocational centers, to boot.

The grenades weren’t real, of course, and the gunfire was actually from paintball guns, but the three-mile run was true to form, as was the obstacle course that included scaling the wall.

“The hardest part for me was the obstacle course,” said Morris senior Toni Childress. “I’m five foot two, and the climbing wall seemed like it was eight feet tall. Our teammates helped us over.”

“It was fun,” said Anthony Lawless, another Morris senior who participated in the challenge. “I was sore for about four days afterward, though.”

Lawless said he got pummeled by paintballs during one segment of the challenge, but it was all timed, and he had to keep moving forward toward his goal. The worst hits were one on his forehead that knocked his head backward and a few on his fingers that left bruises that lasted for days.

Childress said her favorite part of the challenge was entering and clearing the rooms where they were being shot with paintballs.

“Our team did really good on that,” she said.

The students who participated on the challenge were GAVC Criminal Justice I and II students – all juniors and seniors from high schools in Morris, Minooka, Coal City, and Gardner-South Wilmington. It was held Oct. 13 at the Marseilles National Guard Training Facility.

GAVC criminal justice teacher and 30-year Grundy County Sheriff’s Department deputy veteran Craig Williamson thought it would be good training for the students to go to the challenge. He took a few students to the challenge’s pilot program last year, where they competed against two other schools.

“This gave them a chance to compete against other students,” Williamson said. “To test what they’re learning in class.”

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