Safety Law News for 11/4/14

  • Six years after budget constraints forced the Salinas, California Police Department to cut the School Resource Officers program; it received a $3.4 million federal grant to reinstate the program for three years.

Safety Law News for 10/29/14

  • The Missouri legislature voted to override Gov. Nixon’s veto of a law that would allow school districts to designate teachers or administrators to have guns in school as school safety officers.  But school administrators and superintendents are refusing to allow their teachers to carry guns.

Safety Law News for 10/23/14

  • Rutherford County, Tennessee School Resource Officers are teaching the DRIVE Course to students in both the classroom and on the road.  DRIVE stands for the Defense Response Improving Vehicle Education program.
  • The San Diego Unified School District has acquired a 14-ton armored vehicle it plans to use as a search and rescue vehicle.  The US Marine Corps trained school resource officers on how to drive and use the M-RAP.

Safety Law News for 10/17/14

  • The Crime Stoppers Tips Hotline will be taking over the administrative functions of a school safety notification program in Northland, Missouri schools.  The new program allows students from the Northland schools to anonymously text tips to law enforcement.

Safety Law News for 10/6/14

Safety Law News for 9/26/14

  • In Omaha, Nebraska, associate school resource officers are part-time employees who are retired from the police force. They work as sworn officers in public schools, but now they’re seeing their hours slashed because of provisions of the federal Affordable Health Care Act.
  •  Every public middle and high school in North Carolina has a school resource officer.   As a new school year begins, North Carolina officials are encouraging parents and students to get to know their school resource officer.
  • Officials in Marshall, Alabama aim to have full-time officers at each of Marshall County’s schools.