Safety Law News for August 22, 2019

• In California, the Sacramento School Board is implementing a new plan that will reduce the number of school resource officers in the district and place them off-campus.  The proposal, known as “Reimagine School Safety,” seeks to provide greater mental health support resources and more training on implicit bias in place of the current number of school resource officers. There are currently eight officers and one sergeant assigned to cover 75 schools; the new plan would reduce that total to about three.

• In Missouri, State Auditor Nicole Galloway formally requested Governor Mike Parson call a special legislative session to implement recommendations made by a school safety task force.  The Missouri School Safety Task Force, released a report with recommendations for protection of students, including better training for mental health issues and the presence school-based law enforcement.

• In Florida, the Broward County committee tasked with investigating the Parkland school shooting and issuing campus safety recommendations announced that there were still more than two dozen charter schools in Broward County that have not established a plan to hire their own security guards as required by state law.  Other school districts in Florida are having the same problem.

• In Pennsylvania, the Line Mountain School District is starting the school year with a mental health initiative. The program provides behavioral health support as needed during school, after school and on weekends. Counselors can carry a caseload of 18 to 20 students.  Teachers and administration can recommend the program to families, or families can request to be a part of the program.

Safety Law News for August 15, 2019

In New York,  the Court of Appeal held that a student who was assaulted on campus is entitled to records of all assaults that occurred on school grounds to help her case.  The court reasoned that in determining whether the duty of a school to provide a safe campus  is breached in the context of injuries caused by the acts of fellow students, it must be established that school authorities had sufficiently specific knowledge or notice of the dangerous conduct which caused injury; that is, that the student misconduct could reasonably have been anticipated.  (M.C. v. City of New York)

In Louisiana, the Louisiana Court of Appeal held that a school was liable for an older student’s actions when he sexually abused a younger student on a school bus.  The evidence showed that school officials were aware of the recurring behavior of the student, but did not intervene properly and did not follow their policy of reporting the incidents to police or child protection agencies.  The court ruled that the school board had a duty to protect its students and that liability is appropriate when the risk of injury is foreseeable and preventable if a requisite degree of supervision had been exercised.  (Pike v. Calcasieu Parish School Board)

In New York, the New York Supreme Court held that a school was not liable for the death of a student after he was struck by a train in an apparent suicide.  Parents for the victim alleged that the school district was indifferent to bullying and harassment from other students.  The court disagreed because the death occurred after school hours and off school premises, the school district did not have control over the victim, and school officials were not on notice of the possibility of the suicide nor were under a distinct duty to guard against it.  (Collazo v. Hicksville Union Free School District)

.• In Missouri, officials from the Ferguson-Florissant School District are implementing a policy that will require students to transport books, binders, and calculators into clear backpacks as part of an attempt to eliminate the weapons that have ended up on their campuses.

Safety Law News for August 9, 2019

• In Kentucky, the Jefferson County Public School Board canceled its school resource officer program by declining by approve contracts with its local law enforcement agencies. The decision will result in the school district having just nine sworn law enforcement officers serving its 156 school campuses when students return to school.

• In New York, the New Rochelle School District Board voted to keep school resource officers out of schools districtwide, following a recommendation from its Culture and Climate Committee.

• In Alabama,  the Chambers County School District sent out a training video to all staff in the district to explain the use of e-cigarettes in high schools.  Students aren’t just using vape devices for nicotine but also synthetic marijuana.  

• In New York, the Governor signed into law a state-wide policy forbidding teachers from coming to school armed. The law, effect immediately, does make exceptions for school resource officers and law enforcement officers on school property.

Safety Law News for August 6, 2019

In Nebraska,  school resource officers in Omaha are receiving training on how to deal with combat-type injuries including how to pack wounds, using a tourniquet and maintaining a person’s airway.  The goal is to equip officers with skills that go beyond basic CPR in the event of an active shooting incident.

In California., officials in San Benito County are receiving positive feedback on the school resource officer program.  Educators, support staff, and parents are reporting that having school resource officers on campus improve overall relationships.

In Mississippi, school resource offices in the City of Petal are receiving Crisis Intervention Team training.  The CIT training is helping to implement a pre-arrest diversion program for individuals that are living with mental illness. The course teaches how to safely deescalate incidents and connect individuals to treatment rather than arrest.

In Massachusetts, all school-based law enforcement officers in Springfield schools will be required to receive training by the National Association of School Resource Officers.

In Missouri, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that the handcuffing by a police officer of an out-of-control seven-year-old boy in the second grade was not an excessive use of force.  The court ruled that the boy’s attempts to flee from the officer posed a safety risk to himself.  And the officer did not violate the student’s right to be free from unreasonable seizure and excessive force by leaving him handcuffed for 15 minutes until his father arrived.  (K.W.P. v. Kansas City Public Schools)

Safety Law News for July 31st, 2019

• In New York, the Governor signed a new law which prevents school districts from arming school staff who are not school resource officers, law enforcement officers, or security guards on school grounds.

• In Washington D.C., New Jersey Congressman Josh Gottheimer and New York Congresswoman Elise Stefanik have introduced the Alyssa’s Legacy Youth in School Safety Act.  The ALYSSA Act will require silent panic alarms in all schools to immediately alert law enforcement of an active shooter situation. It will also increase investment in more well-trained School Resource Officers.

• In Tennessee, the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security is conducting site visits of schools in the state to assess the security measures schools have in place.  The goal is to know which Tennessee schools are the most vulnerable and what the problems are.

• In Wyoming, the Fremont County District 1 School Board voted 4-2 to allow approved staff members to conceal carry firearms in schools, making it the fourth district in Wyoming to approve such a policy.  (Click here to see the policy)

• In Tennessee, officials in Marion County are experimenting with a new technology that uses existing exterior cameras and facial recognition software to recognize weapons.  The system immediately alerts 911 and other officials about the potential threat.  The system will be placed in one school for a year.

Safety Law News for July 12, 2019.

In Texas, the Texas Court of Appeals ruled that a school resource officer acted in good faith and did not engage in an excessive use of force in discharging pepper spray during an altercation at a high school soccer game.  The court held that the good faith standard does not penalize an officer for the need to make a split-second decision to protect himself and the public.  A reasonable officer could have believed using pepper spray under the circumstances was warranted after verbal commands and physically separating the athletes was no longer effective.  (Hernandez v. Blackburn)

In Kentucky, the United States District Court held that a school district may be liable for the criminal actions of its employees when school policy empowers the illegal conduct.  The lawsuits arise out of two cases, involving the same employee, who confiscated student cell phones, searched the phones, found nude photographs, transferred them from the phones, and uploaded them to the Internet.  The court refused to dismiss both cases, ruling that the cases raise the question of whether school policies, training, and supervision make the district vicariously liable to the students. (Malott v. LaRue County School District)  (Bussell v. Elizabethtown Independent School District)

In West Virginia, the Wayne County Sheriff’s Department and the Wayne County Board of Education are bringing back resource officers for Wayne, Tolsia and Spring Valley schools after school officials said response times weren’t up to par to what they should be.

In North Carolina, the State Superintendent of Education announced that it will provide a statewide Say Something Anonymous Reporting System in the 2019-20 school year. The Say Something program is a school safety app designed to teach students, educators, and administrators how to recognize the signs and signals of those who may be at risk of hurting themselves or others and to anonymously report this information.