Orlando Sentinel

Districts cut ties with school police officers amid protests

- By Gillian Flaccus

PORTLAND, Ore. — An increasing number of cities are rethinking the presence of school resource officers as they respond to the concerns of thousands of demonstrat­ors — many of them young — who have filled the streets night after night to protest the death of George Floyd.

Portland Public Schools, Oregon’s largest school district, on Thursday cut ties with the Portland Police Bureau, joining other urban districts from Minneapoli­s to Denver mulling the fate of such programs. Protesters in some cities, including Portland, have demanded the removal of the officers from schools.

Floyd, who was handcuffed and prone on his stomach, died after a white Minneapoli­s police officer pressed his knee to Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes during an arrest on May 25.

Minneapoli­s suspended its school resource officer program on Tuesday. Districts in St. Paul, Minnesota and Denver are considerin­g doing the same. Protesters in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, have made the end of the school resource officer program in their district one of their demands.

One of the sponsors of the Denver proposal, school board member and protest leader Tay Anderson, said Friday he wants the 18 uniformed police officers assigned to the city’s middle and high schools to be replaced with nurses, counselors and restorativ­e practice coordinato­rs. The district’s own public safety officers would remain and would call for help from police when needed, he said.

Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler said Thursday he would also discontinu­e using school resource officers in two smaller metropolit­an districts under a program that in total costs the city $1.6 million a year and has been in place for more than two decades.

The three districts have a combined student population of nearly 53,000, with more than 49,000 in Portland schools alone.

Having the officers in high schools has been a touchy topic for several years in this liberal city. Students have protested in recent years for an end to the program, at one point even overwhelmi­ng a school board meeting.

“Leaders must listen and respond to community. We must disrupt the patterns of racism and injustice,” Wheeler said

Thursday of the most recent demonstrat­ions. “I am pulling police officers from schools.”

While many Portland residents applauded the decision, others raised immediate concerns about student safety in the event of a school shooting or other emergency. A suicidal student last year brought a gun to a high school at one of the districts that will be affected by the decision and was tackled by the track coach in an incident that got national attention.

“Over the last several years there have been ongoing conversati­ons about the police and their role in public schools,” said Portland Police Chief Jami Resch. “I want to reassure the public that if there is a public safety emergency at a school, PPB will respond.”

The move is “a kneejerk reaction,” and the decision by a few districts to stop their programs could snowball — to the detriment of students nationwide, said Mo Canady, executive director of the National Associatio­n of School Resource Officers, which represents about 10,000 dues-paying officers.

There are an estimated 25,000 school resource officers nationwide, he said.

 ?? SEAN MEAGHER/THE OREGONIAN ?? Young marchers protesting George Floyd’s death are seen Tuesday in Portland, Oregon.
SEAN MEAGHER/THE OREGONIAN Young marchers protesting George Floyd’s death are seen Tuesday in Portland, Oregon.

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