Times-Call (Longmont)

School Resource Officers program OK’D

- BY JOHN FRYAR STAFF WRITER

Longmont City Council members voted unanimousl­y Tuesday night to approve an intergover­nmental agreement with the St. Vrain Valley School District for assigning police School Resource Officers to high schools and middle schools in Longmont during the 2020-21 school year.

Under the written agreement, the school district will pay the city a total of $928,676 as its por tion of the costs of the SRO program of ficers’ salaries, including two of ficers each for Longmont, Silver Creek and Skyline high schools and one SRO each for Longs Peak Middle School, Westview Middle School, Timberline K-8 School, Trail Ridge Middle School, Old Columbine/sunset Middle School and Altona Middle School.

The agreement does not detail what the city-funded portion share of those police SROS expenses are.

Longmont City Council originally was scheduled to act on the agreement with the school district on Feb. 9 but postponed considerat­ion to get more informatio­n from the city’s Department of Public Safety about how officers are selected and trained for the SRO unit, the training they undergo, as well as informatio­n from the school district officials about the program.

On Tuesday night, Council heard reports from Sgt. John Garcia, head of Longmont police’s SRO program, from Christina Pacheco Sims, manager of Longmont”s Children Youth and Families unit in the Community Ser vices Department and Municipal Court Chief Probation Officer Tara Johnson, as well as from St. Vrain Valley Schools Superinten­dent Don Haddad.

Garcia said the SRO unit

and school district have “shared values of what we want for our schools and the community.”

He told the Council that “we are not perfect, by any means,” but “we are tr ying to improve constantly” through the Longmont city staff’s and the SRO unit’s meetings with the school district. Also, he said, the program is improving through its unit’s and its officers’ relationsh­ips with the district as well as the staf fs and students in the schools to which those officers are assigned.

Garcia said that in the process of selecting officers for the SRO program, “I lean heavily on what the school wants.”

Haddad said the SRO program, like the district’s other policies and programs, are intended to make sure “that ever y one of our children is treated with the utmost respect” and those students and their safety and security “is paramount.”

Garcia said the first priority in the Longmont police SRO program’s set of mission statements is to “provide safe learning environmen­ts in our schools.”

Other priorities, he said, include providing resources to schools, their staf fs, and parents as well as to foster “a positive relationsh­ip with our youth.”

Garcia said traditiona­l law enforcemen­t activities are something “where we spend the least amount of our time,” and he, Sims and Johnson described restorativ­e justice and diversion programs that are used to avoid placing youthful offenders in the criminal justice system.

Council members also heard Silver Creek High School SRO Staci Stallings and Longs Peak Middle School SRO Wayne Rafferty describe their work in those positions.

Raf fer ty emphasized that “our law enforcemen­t position is really on the back burner for an SRO.” He said the officers are a for students and their parents.

“It really is like a second career,” Garcia said, especially with the SROS’ counseling and mentoring of students.

In a memo to Council for Tuesday night’s discussion, city staff wrote that the SRO program “works to carefully select and specifical­ly train a group of highly skilled communityo­riented officers to work in collaborat­ion with the St. Vrain Valley School District, other city depar tments and Restorativ­e Justice. SRO training includes, but is not limited to, childhood trauma & adverse childhood experience­s, working with students with disabiliti­es, mental health issues in children, cultural diversity and implicit bias.”

Staff wrote council that a review of data “supports the important role that the Longmont SRO program serves in supporting, mentoring and teaching students, so they can reach their fullest potential. In addition, the SRO program, Children, Youth and Families, Municipal Probation and City Prosecutor’s Of fice work together to stop the ‘school to prison pipeline’ and promote public safety.

“For example, these entities collaborat­ed to develop the REWIND (Rebuildres­ource ing Expectatio­ns and Walking into New Directions) program. REWIND is a collaborat­ive system whereby profession­als provide the youth and family with a quick response. They assess youth needs in order to impact recidivism and address the root cause of youth‘s behavior that could ultimately result in involvemen­t in the criminal justice system.”

A video of Tuesday night’s considerat­ion of the intergover­nmental agreement with the school district, including the staf f presentati­ons, can be viewed at tinyurl.com/ x74e8h5w.

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