The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

School vaping sanctions surging in Connecticu­t

- By Kathleen Megan

While suspension­s and expulsions in Connecticu­t schools are on the decline, the incidence of such disciplina­ry action in connection with vaping is increasing dramatical­ly, according to a report released Wednesday by the state Department of Education.

Between the 2015-16 and 2017-18 school years, the number of sanctions associated with the use of electronic nicotine delivery systems went from 349 to 2,160.

“The one stand-out piece from this year’s report is the six-fold increase” in vaping sanctions, the state Department of Education’s chief performanc­e officer, Ajit Gopalakris­hnan, told the state Board of Education at a meeting Wednesday.

Chief Operating Officer Charlene Russell-Tucker said the state agency is taking an “all hands on deck” approach to assisting school districts with how to handle the issue and has reached out to work with the state Department of Health and the state Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services

“We are connecting them to our districts and they are actually going out and doing training,” Russell-Tucker said. “We recognize that this is a concern and the districts are concerned about it.”

Tarini Krishna, one of the non-voting student members of the board, said she had noticed that “schools seem a little lost in how to address the problem.”

“I would urge schools to involve students,” Krishna said. Often, she said teachers don’t know what a Juul — a type of e-cigarette — looks like and may think a student is using a flash drive on their computer when they are actually charging a Juul.

“They are charging them in class (and teachers) don’t even know,” Krishna said.

John Frassinell­i, chief of the state education agency’s Bureau of Health, Nutrition, Family Services and Adult Education, said he’s been hearing from districts that are starting to gather resources on the topic and conferring with state health officials about providing opportunit­ies for talks with parents and students.

The report showed the incidence of suspension­s and expulsions has declined over the last five years, with suspension­s down 22 percent in that time period and expulsions down 15 percent. There was, however, an uptick in expulsions from the 2016-17 school year to 2017-18, from 750 to 797.

The report also showed black and Hispanic students continue to be suspended more frequently than their white peers.

While one out of every 25 white students received at least one suspension in 201718, the numbers increased significan­tly for non-white students: One out of every seven black students received at least one suspension during that school year, while one out of every 10 Hispanic students experience­d the same sanction.

The report also showed that for the same offenses, black and Hispanic students receive a severe sanction at a slightly greater rate than white students. For example, for students involved in one incident of fighting or physical aggression last year, about 74 percent of black and Hispanic students received an out-of-school suspension or expulsion compared to 70.1 percent of white students.

The number of sanctions connected to violence against persons went down 16.1 percent over the five years from 2013-14 to 2017-18, while discipline connected to physical and verbal confrontat­ion increased 17.4 percent and incidents connected to fighting and battery went up 14.9 percent.

The number of cases stemming from school policy violations decreased by 32.8 percent and those connected to theft went down 29.7 percent.

The total number of school-based arrests, however, went up last year compared to the previous year: from 1,244 in 2016-17 to 1,797 last year. Four years earlier, in 2014-15, the number was 1,737 and it had dropped for two years in a row before last year’s upturn.

 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Angel Salcedo, of Port Chester, N.Y., blows a ring at CLOUDS Vapors & Lounge in Greenwich in 2016.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Angel Salcedo, of Port Chester, N.Y., blows a ring at CLOUDS Vapors & Lounge in Greenwich in 2016.

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