Editor鈥檚 Note: 911爆料网 was heartbroken to hear of the unexpected passing of MSIM alumnus Del Hazeley on Oct. 16. Shortly before he died, he spoke with us for an alumni profile and viewed the story that follows. We are sharing it with the approval of his colleagues at the UW Police Department to honor Del鈥檚 memory, as he had such a lasting impact on faculty, staff, students and alumni across campus.

A Master of Science in Information Management degree can take you to unexpected places.
Del Hazeley did not expect to be fighting crime, but that鈥檚 all in a day鈥檚 work at the University of Washington Police Department, where he was recently promoted to director of strategy and organizational excellence.
While he鈥檚 not a law enforcement officer, Hazeley works to promote public safety by analyzing the data and looking for patterns upon which the police can act. For example, knowing that thieves tend to feast on laptops and phones at the beginning of fall quarter, the UWPD ran an awareness campaign to encourage people to be on the lookout.
鈥淲e have the ability to really target what鈥檚 going to come and preemptively mitigate it, rather than wait until it happens,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a strategy part of it that I really love, is getting to determine the types of programs and tactics we need.鈥
Making good use of data is just one aspect of a job that has Hazeley overseeing the UWPD鈥檚 information technology department, communications and records department, and security services and risk mitigation department, along with the police鈥檚 strategic initiatives and external relations.
Hazeley joined the UWPD as its assistant technical services manager in 2012 while he was still working on his master鈥檚 in the Mid-Career MSIM program. He thought his next stop might be at one of the Puget Sound region鈥檚 big tech employers, but a chance encounter with the police chief at a UW event changed his career trajectory. The two met again later, and Hazeley didn鈥檛 realize at first that he was being recruited for a job.
鈥淟ike the third meeting, we went to lunch and he said, 鈥榃hy don鈥檛 you send over your resume?鈥 And it finally hit me that he was looking at me for this role,鈥 Hazeley said.
When he began working at UWPD, he oversaw the police department鈥檚 IT, communications and records departments. He completed his MSIM in 2013, and it wasn鈥檛 long before the project management skills he built in the program proved to be useful at his workplace. The UWPD was constructing its new building, and Hazeley was tapped to work as a technical project manager in 2015. He spent a year leading the technical implementation for the new building and solving problems as they arose. He said his experience at the iSchool helped prepare him to wear many hats.
鈥淭he great thing about the MSIM degree is it prepares you for a lot of different roles, whether they鈥檙e in technology or not,鈥 Hazeley said. 鈥淚t boils down to information management, how you receive it, how you disseminate it, what you do with it when you have it.鈥
In his current role, Hazeley juggles multiple roles, both behind the scenes and as one of the public faces of the police department. On a given day, he might strategize ways to prevent cyberattacks, gather feedback from custodians, or talk to student leaders. He might even be the one hitting 鈥渟end鈥 on a campus safety message through the UW Alert system.
鈥淏ecause of the nature of it, where you鈥檙e responding to crisis, you literally never know what you鈥檙e going to have to deal with on any given day,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat makes it a very interesting job 鈥 there鈥檚 never a dull day.鈥
Members of the 2013 MSIM cohort have set up a GoFundMe page to help support Del鈥檚 family. To make a gift in Del鈥檚 memory, go to .