Safety Law News for March 9, 2017

  • In Alabama, the Colbert County Schools Superintendent is working with the sheriff to get school resource officers in the schools.  “It’s imperative that we move quickly and swiftly to get these resource officers in place so that our kids as well as the faculty and staff will feel safe,” said Gale Satchel, Colbert County Schools Superintendent.
  • In Massachusetts, the Fitchburg School Committee unanimously approved a policy that will allow dogs to sniff for drugs in the district’s middle and high schools.

Safety Law News for March 3, 2017

  • In South Carolina, a bill that would review South Carolina’s juvenile justice laws was approved by a subcommittee of the legislature. House Bill 3055 authorizes a new legislative committee to make recommendations to the General Assembly on ways to divert more juveniles from the criminal justice system.
  • In Colorado, officials in Larimer County approved the position of a diversion program coordinator who would be responsible for two juvenile diversion programs. The programs would work closely with school resource officers in diverting lower-level incidents within the school system away from the juvenile justice system.

Safety Law News for February 28, 2017

  • In Illinois, DeKalb County officials are working with Sycamore educators and students to train staff and students on self-defense procedures as part of a national program known as ALICE. The program is designed to respond to armed attackers using procedures such as barricading doors and attacking intruders.

Safety Law News for February 16, 2017

  • In Minnesota, educators in the St. Cloud and Sauk Rapids-Rice school districts have put additional resources on identifying students who are disruptive by creating individual plans to help them and monitoring their mental health and social and emotional learning. Teachers have noticed the change. It has been a calmer year.
  • In Washington State, arrests in Spokane Public Schools are down 88 percent from last year as educators have turned to a new disciplinary policy based on restorative justice practices.
  • In Illinois, Mundelein High School officials are teaming up with the Mundelein Police Department to put school resource officers in the classroom – as teachers. The goal is to have the officers teach on the law while making connections with the students.

Safety Law News for February 9, 2017

  • In Colorado, the Douglas County Board of Education has voted to support a proposed policy that would allow people, including teachers, with a concealed carry permit to carry a handgun on campuses.

Safety Law News for February 6, 2017

  • In Tennessee, the Cheatham County Commission voted to double the number of officers in its School Resource Officers Program in the county’s 13 schools from three to six.