Imperial Valley Press

Florida legislator­s, governor clash over school security

-

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. (AP) — Florida’s top incoming legislativ­e leaders are rejecting Gov. Rick Scott’s push to redirect $58 million so school districts can hire more campus police officers. The lawmakers say the state should stay with a program they crafted that puts armed security guards and staff members in its public schools.

House Speaker-elect Jose Oliva and incoming Senate President-elect Bill Galvano, both Republican­s, said Wednesday the money should remain budgeted for the state’s guardian program. The Republican governor, who leaves office in January and is running for the U.S. Senate, wants the unspent money freed so the districts can hire more officers.

An Associated Press survey found two-thirds of the districts want police officers or sheriff’s deputies in schools, with most saying their communitie­s aren’t comfortabl­e with anyone but sworn law enforcemen­t officers carrying guns on campus.

Oliva and Galvano, who assume their roles in November, said their guardian program needs time to grow.

After a gunman killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in February, Scott and the Legislatur­e passed the leaders’ bill making Florida the first state to require all public schools to have armed security on site whenever they’re open.

The state’s 67 countywide districts were given the more expensive choice of hiring additional police officers, also known as school resource officers, or supplement­ing the officers they already had with the cheaper guardian program. Any money not covered by the state had to be picked up by the districts.

Some districts, however, said they can’t afford officers and are hiring fulltime guardians. These include Broward, Stoneman Douglas’ district. A police officer can cost $100,000 a year in salary and benefits, while guardians are estimated to cost between $30,000 and $50,000. Some districts, mostly in rural parts of the state, are supplement­ing officers with armed staff who get a $500 stipend, saying their communitie­s support that arrangemen­t.

So far, 22 districts have received $9.3 million out of $67 million set aside for guardians.

“Any new idea takes time for people to accept,” Oliva said. “When school resource officers were first mentioned as a possibilit­y at schools (in the 1970s and 1980s), the big outcry was ‘never in my school.’ Today the outcry is for a police officer in every school.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States