Chicago Sun-Times

Local councils will have final say on officers patrolling schools: CPS

- BY MATTHEW HENDRICKSO­N, STAFF REPORTER mhendricks­on@suntimes.com | @MHendricks­onCST

Local school councils will have the final say on whether Chicago police officers will work at their schools, a district official said.

Chief Safety and Security officer Jadine Chou made the announceme­nt Wednesday night during a public meeting led by Chicago police to discuss the future role and responsibi­lities of school resource officers. The role of police in schools has come under fire as some question whether the schools would be better served with more social workers and support staff instead.

“We are not here to say all schools need to have school resource officers,” Chou said. “We know that there’s no one-size-fits-all [approach].

Chou encouraged those at the meeting “to reach out to your local school councils.”

Local school councils are made up of parents, community members, educators and parents, who are both elected by the community and appointed by CPS.

A spokeswoma­n for CPS said individual councils will take the issue up before the start of the upcoming school year in early September but did not provide additional informatio­n.

Wednesday’s meeting, held at the Eckhart Park Field House in Noble Square, is part of a public-input process that was recommende­d by the city’s Office of the Inspector General after a report last year detailed a concerning lack of oversight by police and CPS for the officers.

Months after the report was released, two officers were removed from Marshall High School when a video showed them pulling a 16-year-old student down a flight of stairs and repeatedly shocking her with a stun gun.

Several dozen community members were broken up Wednesday evening into small groups to discuss restorativ­e justice practices, police oversight and accountabi­lity and mental health awareness by officers.

Officers took notes as community members pushed them to coordinate better with social workers and administra­tors at schools. Others told officers police need to be more aware of how they interact with marginaliz­ed groups, like LGBTQ youth and special-needs students.

Despite a promise by police that officers facilitati­ng the discussion­s would “dig deep,” current and former CPS students, parents and community members said they felt the two-hour meeting was too short to provide much substance.

“It got sort of sidetracke­d,” said a CPS student who declined to give her name. “It felt like the conversati­ons had been spun from the beginning.”

The student, who said she doesn’t support having police in the city’s public schools, said the meeting did little to change her mind.

Still, many others said they appreciate­d the department’s outreach efforts and hoped it was the start of a longer conversati­on.

Cata Truss, the wife of newly appointed school board member Dwayne Truss, said she found the group discussion format helpful and hoped the police department would continue to replicate them with other issues concerning community policing.

“I would like to see them do this all the time,” said Truss, of Austin.

The department plans to hold three additional public meetings about police in schools, with the next scheduled for 10 a.m. Saturday at Hamilton Park, 513 W. 72nd St.

The Chicago Teachers Union signaled that the union backed the move to hand the decision to the councils but said the members of the council need the authority to use the funding for other critical needs.

“We support the basic tenets of democracy embedded in the LSC endeavor,” spokespers­on Chris Geovanis said.

Officer Vanessa Westley, of CPD’s Office of Restorativ­e Justice, said the conversati­ons would also continue after the school year begins.

“This is not a one-hit wonder,” Westley promised.

 ?? MATTHEW HENDRICKSO­N/SUN-TIMES ?? Chicago Public Schools Chief Safety and Security officer Jadine Chou speaks at a public meeting Wednesday at Eckhart Park in Noble Square.
MATTHEW HENDRICKSO­N/SUN-TIMES Chicago Public Schools Chief Safety and Security officer Jadine Chou speaks at a public meeting Wednesday at Eckhart Park in Noble Square.

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