The Columbus Dispatch

Columbus high schools reopen without police

- Alissa Widman Neese Columbus Dispatch

A final group of students headed back to Columbus high schools last week after more than a year of attending online classes from inside their homes.

But for the first time in 25 years, city police officers won’t be walking the halls with them.

And while that could change someday, it won’t happen this academic year.

Columbus City Schools’ long-standing school resource officer program is in limbo, after officials allowed a contract between the district and the Columbus Division of Police to expire on June 30.

Nine months later, a new contract hasn’t been renegotiat­ed. Officials from both sides have expressed interest in setting up a meeting to start the process – while also acknowledg­ing that hashing out a new agreement won’t happen overnight.

“We’re still in the space of considerin­g and looking, researchin­g and digging in,” Columbus Board of Education

President Jennifer Adair told The Dispatch on Wednesday.

“We really want to get this right, when we think about reimaginin­g what school safety looks like, in terms of a formal police presence, in addition to our own safety and security.”

In the fall, a group of district employees, students and community members tasked with making recommenda­tions on the matter ultimately couldn’t reach a consensus.

Twice in December, board members discussed their desires to retool the district’s relationsh­ip with Columbus police, but didn’t vote on any decisions.

Since then, there haven’t been any public discussion­s on the subject.

Based on the sole recommenda­tion of the fall working group, the school board is now in the process of establishi­ng a new, permanent committee led by board member Carol Beckerle to tackle a variety of school-safety issues, including what a future partnershi­p with Columbus police might look like. Board members Tina Pierce and Michael Cole will also serve on that “culture and climate” committee, along with some administra­tors. Community members will be asked to participat­e and give input on specific topics, Beckerle said.

In the meantime, police who once served as resource officers have been redeployed to other assignment­s, Columbus police Deputy Chief Jennifer Knight said.

Last school year, an armed Columbus police officer was stationed at each of the district’s 19 high schools, some of which are combined with middle schools. The arrangemen­t cost the district $1.23 million for 2019-20.

For much of this school year, the lapsed police contract hadn’t affected district operations. Until February, no Columbus students had returned to school buildings since Gov. Mike Dewine first ordered all Ohio districts to shut down in March 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

As of Thursday, with the exception of a handful of elementary school classrooms, all Columbus students have returned in a hybrid learning model. They’re split into two groups that attend in-person classes twice weekly and classes online from home the other three days.

Last year, the district spent nearly $6 million to employ 84 of its own unarmed security officers in many buildings, an increase from 53 the previous year. That

was in addition to the school resource officers.

With students back in buildings this academic year, albeit at a reduced capacity, those security officers are monitoring buildings for now, district spokeswoma­n Jacqueline Bryant said.

“The office has a good relationsh­ip with CPD and can call upon them if needed,” Bryant said in an email.

Unlike having an officer on-site, Knight told The Dispatch that the district’s requests are now funneled through police dispatcher­s like any other call for help.

“It’s not just about building security, but also developing relationsh­ips,” Knight said of the school resource officers. “Our goal is to intercede prior to a situation becoming a criminal act.”

The Columbus Board of Education isn’t alone as it mulls whether police should have a role in schools.

Nationwide protests over the 2020 death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, while his neck was pressed under the knee of a white Minneapoli­s police officer, have spurred similar demands of other schools across the country, particular­ly due to the disproport­ionate impact of policing on students of color.

In the 2015-16 school year, Black students comprised 15% of the school population

nationwide but accounted for 31% of arrests, according to the most recent data from the U.S. Department of Education Office of Civil Rights.

About 61% of Columbus students are Black or multiracia­l, but they accounted for 82% of expulsions, 77% of out-ofschool suspension­s and 72% of inschool suspension­s, according to the data. A breakdown of arrests and referrals to law enforcemen­t by race wasn’t listed.

In Columbus, a group of alumni, students and parents called CPD out of CCS first pushed for the permanent removal of school resource officers, just weeks before the district’s contract expired. Several students spoke about feeling threatened in their schools during a June school board meeting. A crowd of hundreds also protested outside board president Adair’s home.

In a Thursday email to The Dispatch, the group’s leaders said they’re disappoint­ed to hear district officials discussing a possible relationsh­ip with police again, “a choice that actively ignores student voice” and will endanger students, they said.

The group has pushed for more counselors in buildings to support students.

“We are not satisfied with the current state of things, as our mission is to amplify student voice and end all forms of policing in CCS, and we will not stop until this goal is achieved.”

Elsewhere in central Ohio, the issue of police in schools has divided the Worthingto­n community, after a split school board abruptly voted 3-2 in July, with no community input, to sever its contracts with both the Columbus Division of Police and the Worthingto­n Police Department. Before that, they stationed a resource officer at Worthingto­n Kilbourne and Thomas Worthingto­n high schools, which are in Columbus and Worthingto­n, respective­ly.

The program had just started in 2018 and the district paid about $190,000 total for the two positions in the 2019-20 school year. The Columbus officer has moved into another role, Knight said. The Worthingto­n officer, meanwhile, decided to retire, city spokeswoma­n Anne Brown said.

Worthingto­n Board of Education President Jennifer Best, who voted against the move, said the board “does not have any plans at this time to renegotiat­e contracts” with either police department.

The situation has upset many parents.

Bill Bryant, 56, of the Far North Side said his biggest concern is that the decision to remove police happened too quickly and unexpected­ly to fill the void with other safety measures. His 17-yearold son is a junior at Worthingto­n Kilbourne and his family has lived in the district for 25 years.

He said he felt the program was a success because officers were mentors to some children and “weren’t there to hand out penalties or discipline.” In 2019, an officer helped locate a gun and ammunition a student brought to school before the situation became violent, Bryant said.

Just last week, a video of a fight in a Thomas Worthingto­n restroom, in which one girl drags another girl to the ground and strikes her repeatedly in the head, made its rounds on social media

“Now it’s a question that’s going to be asked after every incident: If we had a school resource officer, could they have done something?” Bryant said in an email. “Our community is more divided now than I’ve ever seen it, as a result of how this was done … and it’s putting our kids at risk.” awidmannee­se@dispatch.com @Alissawidm­an

 ?? JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Students arrive for their first day of in-person classes at Eastmoor Academy High School on Thursday. This is the first year in 25 that school resource officers aren’t at high schools at Columbus City Schools.
JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Students arrive for their first day of in-person classes at Eastmoor Academy High School on Thursday. This is the first year in 25 that school resource officers aren’t at high schools at Columbus City Schools.

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