The Morning Call (Sunday)

Parents beat up school safety agent enforcing COVID vaccinatio­n rules

- By Thomas Tracy and John Annese

Three parents enraged they couldn’t get into a Brooklyn elementary school without proof of COVID vaccinatio­n beat up a school safety agent Thursday, sending her to the hospital, according to union officials.

The parents, two fathers and a mother, were carrying cake and pizza when they showed up at PS 158 in East New York at about 2 p.m., said Gregory Floyd, the head of Teamsters Local 237, which represents the city’s school safety agents.

The parents had children in common, and one of those kids was celebratin­g a birthday, he said.

They were greeted by a lone school safety agent at the entrance, who asked to see proof of vaccinatio­n — but the parents barreled past her, telling her they had already called ahead and spoken to someone about it, he said.

“Don’t touch me! Don’t touch me! Don’t touch me!” the mother demanded of the agent as she tried to stop them. That’s when the two fathers held the 30-year-old school safety agent down while the mother beat her, yanking her hair and ripping off one of her fingernail­s, Floyd alleged.

“We’re talking about three individual­s who are supposed to be responsibl­e adults, parents, assaulting a school safety agent in uniform,” Floyd said.

The trio fled, but one of the fathers was arrested after coming back to pick up his child, Floyd said.

The mother returned as well — to make a 911 call alleging the school safety agent arrested her — and she was arrested as well, he said.

An NYPD spokeswoma­n said the parents were told ahead of time they could drop off the birthday treats, but wouldn’t be allowed inside because of COVID restrictio­ns.

Kijana Harbin, 26, the father of the student celebratin­g a birthday, faces felony assault, disorderly conduct and harassment charges, police said.

The mother, Tazaine Brooks, 26, is charged with felony assault.

The school has 429 students, no cameras, and a single NYPD school safety agent assigned, Floyd said.

“This shows once again that there’s a need for at least two school safety agents. They shouldn’t work alone,” he said. “They’re unarmed. And now we have deranged parents we have to worry about.”

The 10-year veteran school safety agent was taken to Brookdale Hospital with bruises and sprains, union officials said. Her nail was removed from her right thumb, and she’ll need x-rays to determine if anything was fractured.

“We do not tolerate acts of violence at our schools or against any member of our school community, especially our incredible school safety agents who keep our young people safe,” said Department of Education spokeswoma­n Jenna Lyle.

Department of Education staff must be vaccinated. No requiremen­t is in place for students, unless they participat­e in sports or other “high-risk” extracurri­cular activities.

Schools Chancellor David Banks said during a parent town hall in Brooklyn’s District 22 that the restrictio­ns were made “with the best of intentions, which was to keep the school safe. If we start opening it up to parents and everybody else coming into our building, you just increase the possibilit­y of spread. That’s what the rationale has been.”

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