Director of Manatee Technical College Law Enforcement Academy retires

Jay Romine served 33 years in law enforcement and over 12 years as a director at MTC in Lakewood Ranch.


Jay Romine and Ed Smyth work for the Palmetto Police Department in 1980.
Jay Romine and Ed Smyth work for the Palmetto Police Department in 1980.
Courtesy image
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When Mill Creek's Jay Romine started out as a police officer with the Palmetto Police Department in 1979, officers were issued guns but not bullets.

Because he was 18-years-old, Romine had a problem — he wasn’t old enough to purchase bullets.

“The chief (Mike Rushing at the time) put me in his car, and we drove down to the local sporting goods store, which was owned by my cousin,” he said with a chuckle. “The chief bought me three boxes of 357 rounds, set them on the counter and said, ‘There you go. You’re on midnights.’” 

For the next 33 years, Romine protected and served Manatee County, first in Palmetto for about two years, then in Holmes Beach, where he served as chief for 20 years. 

When Romine retired from law enforcement, it only lasted for about six months before he was hired on as the director of Manatee Technical College’s Florida Law Enforcement Academy.

The job brought him full circle back to the place his career started in 1979 when he attended the academy as a cadet. He also took over the position from Rushing.

This time around, thanks to 3-month-old granddaughter Lilliana Jayne, Romine’s retirement from MTC is more likely to stick. His first day of retirement is Nov. 1.

“It’s time for me to be a poppy,” he said. “My priorities are probably three-fold. Lillie is first, the deer population in Alabama is second and staying out of my wife’s hair is third.” 

Jayne Romine described her husband as “the old man at the window noting everything in the neighborhood.”

Since she still works from home, she’s counting on the baby to keep her husband busier this time around in retirement. 

Romine laughed and said cops don’t stop watching what’s going on just because they retire.

Jayne and Jay Romine adore their 3-month-old granddaughter Lilliana Jayne.
Photo by Lesley Dwyer

Romine’s retirement party was held at Beef O’Brady’s Oct. 17. MTC coworkers, law enforcement, family and golf buddies gathered to celebrate a 46-year career marked with honors, such as graduating from the FBI National Academy and being inducted into the Florida Law Enforcement Officers’ Hall of Fame. 

Only about 4% of applicants are accepted into the FBI National Academy.

“He’s done great things,” Romine’s sister Gina Page said. “I’m so proud of him. My son is a detective with the Bradenton Police Department, and it is because of Jay.” 

Detective Michael Page described his uncle as someone to emulate because he always does the right thing.

Over and over again, the party guests kept describing Romine as a man with integrity. While Sheriff Rick Wells was not in attendance, his comments fell right in line. 

“As Director of the MTC Law Enforcement Academy, his outstanding leadership and unwavering commitment to training the next generation has made a lasting impact,” Wells said. “Jay instilled in his trainees the same integrity, discipline and work ethic that defined his own service.”

The largest and latest project Romine leaves behind is the Law Enforcement Training Center that opened earlier this year in Myakka City. It was 18 years in the making, and Romine was not going to retire until he saw the project through to the end.

Jay Romine is retiring as director of the Law Enforcement Academy at Manatee Technical College.
Photo by Lesley Dwyer

The $7.01 million facility features a 50-yard pistol range, 200-yard rifle range, 300-by-600-foot driving pad with adjustable lighting, two observation towers, a classroom and an armory room.

The 70-acre campus is a partnership between MTC and the Bradenton Police Department. Good working relationships between law enforcement agencies in Manatee County was something Romine created years earlier.

In 1997, Romine founded the Manatee County Law Enforcement Council. What began with a few locals sitting around a table has grown to include state and federal agency representation, as well. 

“I’m proud that it survived,” Romine said. “We talked to each other, but not as a group, and we were all dealing with common problems.” 

Romine is also a founding member of Manatee County Crime Stoppers. In 2008, Crime Stoppers renamed its Officer of the Year Award the Jay Romine Officer of the Year Award. 

“Jay has exemplified what it means to serve with dedication and passion,” Wells said. “I am personally grateful for his friendship and wish him nothing but the very best as he embarks on this next chapter of his life.” 

 

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Lesley Dwyer

Lesley Dwyer is a staff writer for East County and a graduate of the University of South Florida. After earning a bachelor’s degree in professional and technical writing, she freelanced for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Lesley has lived in the Sarasota area for over 25 years.

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