The Denver Post

Police may be asked to leave

- By Matt Sebastian and Tiney Ricciardi

Two members of the Denver school board on Friday called for the removal of police officers from the city’s public schools by the end of the year, saying law enforcemen­t personnel not only are unnecessar­y on campuses but detrimenta­l to students of color.

The push by Denver Board of Education vice president Jennifer Bacon and board secretary Tay Anderson — in the form of a resolution to end Denver Public

Schools’ contract with the Denver Police Department — comes as the nightly demonstrat­ions for racial justice and police reform continue downtown in the wake of the George Floyd killing.

The resolution looks likely to be adopted by the seven-member body as soon as next week, as school board president Carrie Olson and board member Bradley Laurvick said they’re supporting Bacon and Anderson.

Currently, DPS pays the department $721,403 a year for 18 school resource officers to be assigned to middle and high schools.

“We want to be able to have a school system where students are greeted by school nurses, by full-time mental health supports, with restorativ­e practice coordinato­rs — and not the Denver Police Department,” Anderson said at a news conference outside East High School.

But, he added, that “does not mean that our relationsh­ip with (Denver police) goes completely away. When we need them, we can call them.”

Bacon and Anderson hope to divert resources spent on police officers to add more mental health workers and full-time nurses. They note that DPS still has its own Department of Safety that provides campus security.

“Our numbers show us that black children are still three to five times more likely to be referred to law enforcemen­t or suspension, respective­ly, and again some of our own practices have introduced students to a normalizat­ion, an internaliz­ation of their place, which is not something we want to contrib

ute to anymore,” Bacon said at the news conference.

In a brief statement, the Denver Police Department said it was examining its program in DPS schools and looking for ways to improve.

“We respect the students, the parents and the school board members and whatever path they chose to move forward on,” the department said. “We will continue to look for ways and opportunit­ies to build relationsh­ips with young people.”

Declaring “black lives matter,” DPS superinten­dent Susana Cordova said at Friday’s news conference that she supports the district’s black students and black educators. She did note the positive relationsh­ip some students have with campus officers and the need for security — but said she recognizes the “absolute need to end the school-to-prison pipeline.”

“There’s absolutely nothing more important than the fact that all students should feel safe, should feel cared for, should feel protected in our schools,” Cordova said. “Education does not happen without that … and this is especially true for our black students.”

The Denver Classroom Teachers Associatio­n, the district’s teachers union, supports the move to get law enforcemen­t out of DPS schools, President Tiffany Choi said.

“Systemic racism is pervasive, and it’s time that we clean out the house,” said Monica Hunter, a DPS teacher and founding member of the union’s Black Educator Caucus, during Friday’s news conference. “Until every white teacher checks their white fragility, our work is not done. We will not be silenced, and we will call you out if you are participat­ing and perpetuati­ng systematic racism. Because black lives matter.”

Anderson said he expects to release the text of the finalized resolution on Monday, and the board could vote as soon as Thursday.

He read from a draft of the document, which notes that, since 2014, students have been ticketed or arrested in school by Denver police officers 4,540 times with “the vast majority being black or Latinx students between the ages of 10 and 15.”

The resolution calls for Denver Police Department school resource officers to be phased out through the fall, with officers fully removed by Jan. 1.

“School resource officers are not needed to ensure the safety of all of our kids,” Anderson said, reading from the draft resolution.

Denver’s John Castillo — whose son, Kendrick, was killed last year in the STEM School Highlands Ranch shooting — disagreed, saying the resolution could have dangerous implicatio­ns.

Castillo said he believes the STEM shooting would have been much worse had the school’s private security guard not been armed. (That guard shot and wounded two students while responding to the STEM shooting and avoided prosecutio­n by coming to an agreement with the victims.)

Officers provide valuable resources that keep schools safe besides their weapons, Castillo said, such as intelligen­ce about drugs and gangs.

And, he added, they can bridge relationsh­ips between

youths and law enforcemen­t. He said he would rather see students offered more opportunit­ies, such as vocational training, that would set them up for long term success.

“Not every kid is going to have a college opportunit­y, nor is it feasible these days,” Castillo said. “The pipeline to prison happens when there’s not opportunit­y and those opportunit­ies aren’t being made. That’s something I’d like to see the school board do instead of parting ways with law enforcemen­t.”

In an interview with The Post, Anderson noted that DPS has 200 schools, uses just 18 officers and has yet to see evidence that having police on campus has ever prevented a school shooting in Denver.

“For decades now, we have had schools that don’t have a police presence,” Anderson said. “This is going to be a difficult decision to stomach for most, but we also have to remember that there have been instances when there have been police officers present and a school shooting still happened.”

The push by Bacon and Anderson comes as Minneapoli­s’ school board this week voted to sever ties with that city’s police department. Floyd died on Memorial Day after a Minneapoli­s police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes. Four fired police officers now face charges in connection with Floyd’s death.

Similarly, the school superinten­dent in Portland, Ore., this week announced he’s discontinu­ing the use of armed police officers in schools.

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