HomeColumbiaColumbia event invites residents and police to walk together on April 25...

Columbia event invites residents and police to walk together on April 25 for a safer and more connected community

Columbia, South Carolina – On April 25, the City of Columbia Police Department will turn a simple walk into a public statement about the kind of city many residents want to build together.

The department’s “Peace Walk for a Safer Community” is planned as a gathering rooted in unity, understanding, and the shared belief that public safety grows stronger when people meet one another with purpose.

Read also: Columbia car wash fundraiser turns a simple Friday stop into support for Rapid Shelter Columbia

Scheduled from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., the event will begin at Central Baptist Church, 3625 Clement Road, where community members of all ages are invited to come together before setting out in a visible show of support for a safer and more connected Columbia.

Rather than focusing only on the idea of safety as enforcement, the event places attention on relationships, conversation, and the kind of trust that develops when residents and law enforcement stand on the same side of a common goal.

Read also: Brittons honors 30 years at its Devine Street location as Columbia celebrates a business woven into city life

The walk is designed to create that space. By bringing neighbors, families, and officers together in one community-centered event, the police department is encouraging a form of engagement that feels direct and human.

The effort is meant to strengthen relationships across the city while reinforcing the idea that lasting safety is built not only through response, but through cooperation, mutual respect, and a willingness to listen.

In that sense, the event looks both at the present and at what comes next. It offers a chance for residents to take part in something immediate, while also supporting a broader vision of a city where understanding is not treated as an afterthought.

The Columbia Police Department’s message is clear: a safer community is something people create together, step by step, conversation by conversation.

Together, we can make a difference: one step at a time!

Read also: Richland County honors the calm voices behind emergency calls during national week of recognition

For Columbia, the Peace Walk is more than a scheduled event on a Saturday afternoon. It is an invitation to show up, walk beside one another, and take part in a collective effort to make the community stronger. For more information, residents can call (839) 228-5740.

Latest

Florence police bring regional partners together for high-pressure active shooter training

Florence, South Carolina - Training never stops in Florence....

South Carolina cities know where the water goes but funding the repairs remains harder

The water usually arrives before anyone calls it a...

A districtwide summer makeover is underway as Florence 1 prepares for the 2026-2027 school year

Florence, South Carolina - Florence’s classrooms are quiet now,...

Newsletter

Random articles

Henry Hall
Henry Hall
News Desk Lead Henry Hall leads the news desk and directs coverage of breaking news, public safety, local government, and investigative reporting. A journalist with several years of experience, he previously reported and edited at daily newspapers across South Carolina and the Southeast. Henry is known for building deep sources throughout Florence County and for his ability to translate complex issues into reporting that matters to residents. A longtime resident of the Florence area, he is deeply invested in the community he covers.

Florence families and business owners eye Myrtle Beach duck race as a summer trip with a cause

Emily Parker said her children did not need much convincing once they heard the words “duck race.” The Florence mother of two had already been...

Florence police bring regional partners together for high-pressure active shooter training

Florence, South Carolina - Training never stops in Florence. That was the message from the City of Florence Police Department after a demanding stretch...

South Carolina cities know where the water goes but funding the repairs remains harder

The water usually arrives before anyone calls it a flood. In Florence, it can start as a brown sheet sliding along a curb in historic...