Shutesbury has selected Devon Pelletier as its new police chief. Credit: SHUTESBURY POLICE DEPARTMENT

SHUTESBURY — Sgt. Devon Pelletier, who has been the temporary police chief since July, will become Shutesbury’s permanent police chief.

Following interviews Tuesday with both Pelletier and Ben Peters, a full-time police officer in Sunderland, the Select Board voted unanimously to offer Pelletier the job, pending background checks and contract negotiations.

Pelletier, a police officer for six years, explained that he hopes to give the department long-term leadership.

“I want to add stability to the town of Shutesbury,” Pelletier said. “I believe some stability, some long-term stability of a police chief to stick around and stay with the department, (will) create a stable environment for officers, and for the community.”

Following the hourlong interviews, the board met in executive session and then took a 3-0 vote to name Pelletier to the position.

“It was not an easy choice, but I feel like we’ve made the right choice,” said Select Board member Rita Farrell.

The search for a new police chief was launched after former Police Chief Kristin Burgess was placed on leave last May. Burgess was acting police chief starting in spring 2021 and became permanent chief in 2022. She succeeded Dan Fernandes, who spent 2½ years in the role.

Before Fernandes, Thomas Harding was the town’s police chief for the better part of 13 years.

The advertisement for the position stated that the police chief oversees two full-time officers and two part-time officers, with an annual budget of $283,000 and a salary range of $70,000 to $85,000, depending on qualifications.

Pelletier said he has crisis intervention training, sexual assault investigation knowledge and is a certified school resource officer, and that he understands the needs and wants of the rural community.

“I believe I’m uniquely qualified for it because I’ve been doing it the last six months,” Pelletier said.

Before his three-year stint on the force, he worked at American International College in Springfield for three years, where he served as an administrative police sergeant.

“I have the professional background for it. I like the administration piece to do it,” Pelletier said.

Peters, who grew up in Amherst, explained that his first time as a police officer was in Shutesbury, under Harding, and he continued police work, following academy training, with a job in New Salem and then joined the Sunderland force. He has both specialized training as an FBI certified crisis and hostage negotiator, and a sexual assault investigator, and has helped run a fall public safety festival.

Both finalists were named by a review committee that included Select Board representative Melissa Makepeace-O’Neil; Personnel Board representative Kathy Salvador; Council on Aging representative Mary Jo Johnson; Amherst Police Chief Gabriel Ting; and three community members, John Hersey, a former Shutesbury police chief and part-time officer; Andrew Reagan, a member of the town’s volunteer fire department; and Kelly Searcy, a law student at the University of Massachusetts, with Bolton as an ex officio member.

Scott Merzbach is a reporter covering local government and school news in Amherst and Hadley, as well as Hatfield, Leverett, Pelham and Shutesbury. He can be reached at smerzbach@gazettenet.com or 413-585-5253.