I had just barely strapped into my squad car and turned the key when a message came across, against a blazing red background:
SHOTS FIRED IN A GANG-RELATED INCIDENT AT THE SCHOOL ON 3RD AV. AND E. ST.
Rob Boe, my instructor, seated behind me, read my mind. "I'll help you find it," he said. "Take a right from this parking lot, turn on your lights and sirens, and let's go."
The next couple of minutes, at the command of a $200,000 state-of-the-art simulator, would leave me unnerved, coated in sweat and queasy. And not because of any shootings or gangs: It was just from flying through the virtual streets, teeming with unpredictable civilians, to get there.
Welcome to the new world of virtual training. And to the immense distance between the excitement of a high-speed chase on TV and the reality of a cascading sequence of live-or-die decisions. Each split second forces the question of whether to hit the accelerator to fly to the scene or hit the brake because a car might sneak out from behind that semi that's letting you pass.
The driving simulator was installed two months ago at the Regional Public Safety Training Facility that is shared between Scott and Carver counties, located in a small room deep in the countryside between Shakopee and Jordan. Across the nation, training of cops and other high-pressure drivers in the public sector is shifting more and more from the street to simulators like these, experts said.
"Every time we take a car out of fleet and go out and simulate chases or driving in hazardous conditions, as we're mandated to do by the state, cars come back with a lot of mechanical issues," said Carver County Sheriff Bud Olson. "We've bumped the cars and damaged them.
"It doesn't take an airplane to learn to fly, and it doesn't take a car to sit in and blow around a corner and simulate a chase -- the motions, the feelings, the policies governing what you're doing."