Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Fresno Trustees Vote 6-1 to Put Cops Back on Middle School Campuses
gvw_nancy_price
By Nancy Price, Multimedia Journalist
Published 2 years ago on
June 16, 2022

Share

 

Twenty months after allowing a middle school police officer contract with Fresno Police Department to lapse, the Fresno Unified School Board voted 6-1 to bring cops back to the campuses.

Amy Idsvoog, the district’s executive officer for health services, safety and emergency response, said the first officers will go to Fort Miller, Tenaya, Terronez, Kings Canyon, and Gaston middle schools. Five more officers will go to Ahwahnee, Tioga, Scandinavian, Tehipite, and Sequoia after winter break, and to the remaining middle schools at the start of the 2023-24 school year, Idsvoog said.

Wawona Middle School is in a county island and is served by a sheriff’s school resource officer, she said.

The contract also provides for one supervising sergeant, who will start in August, she said.

The schools were selected based on multiple data points, including calls for service from Fresno police, emergency calls to the district’s support team, and Gaggle data “regarding possible student situations,” Idsvoog said.

Gaggle is an online tool that monitors student emails, Microsoft Teams chats, and the district’s OneDrive in search of key phrases, including possible self-harm, bullying and harassment, and inappropriate sexual content.

The officers are being phased in as Fresno Police Department staffing increases. The police department also is providing two school resource officers for Central Unified middle schools for the first time, with plans to add a third officer in the future as staffing is available.

Under Fresno Unified’s prior contract with Fresno Police, the officers served as school neighborhood resource officers, splitting their time 50-50 with the schools and neighborhoods. Under the contract amendment, the officers will be on the campuses full time, as they are on high school campuses. The contract amendment’s cost for the first five officers, sergeant, and vehicle leases: $1,017,761.

Contract Lapsed During Pandemic

In the wake of George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police in May 2020 that sparked public protests nationwide, there was growing community pressure to remove police officers from Fresno school campuses. The board decided, in part because schools were still closed due to the pandemic, not to renew the middle school contract.

In 2021 the board renewed the contract to have resource officers on high school campuses.

People protesting the police contract brought signs to the board room on Wednesday, June 15, 2022. (GV Wire/Nancy Price)

Some of the same people and organizations who had protested police on campus, such as Barrios Unidos, were at Wednesday’s meeting to lobby for the board to stick to its October 2020 decision. Speakers urged the board to invest in psychologists, counselors, and other support services instead of in law enforcement.

Likewise, several people who in recent months have called for more security on campuses spoke Wednesday in favor of renewing the contract to make schools safer.

Idsvoog noted that students reported in surveys that they felt more vulnerable when police officers were not on campus.

Board Clerk Veva Islas, who was in Washington, D.C. and was attending the board meeting by telephone, said she remained concerned over the officers’ training and over whether school officials would take every possible step to give students the services and supports needed to prevent the need for intervention by police officers. Islas cast the lone no vote against returning police to middle school campuses.

Idsvoog said that officers will participate in both cultural proficiency and restorative practices training.

Under the district’s rules of engagement, the school resource officers are not responsible for discipline or for minor incidents, including a mutual fight between two students, but would take action in major crimes, including fights with injury, she noted.

Car Leases Questioned

In reviewing the amended contract, Islas questioned why the district would have to pay for the lease of squad cars as well as the salary and benefits of the officers.

Deputy Chief Mike Reid responded that the officers would need a secure site on campus to store any equipment that might be needed to deal with safety, security, and medical incidents.

“What we found out by dissecting what happened in Uvalde, there’s some issues of entry,” Reid said, referring to the recent school shooting at a Texas elementary school where a teen shot and killed 19 children and two adults. “The police chief of the Uvalde Police Department was asking janitors for key rings. They didn’t have any breaching tools. There’s two officers that were shot trying to breach the door. So we need to have protection gear so that we can effectively take an enforcement action.

“The issue becomes, is it going to be readily available to that SRO at the site. They’re the ones that are going to be using those materials, so we want to make sure to get it into their hands.”

Reid said that in a crisis situation, the officers also would have access through their computers to live camera feeds that the district established years ago when Michael Hanson was superintendent.

“We sat down and did site maps of every school site. We also plotted where every camera was, and then we came up with an MOU (memorandum of understanding) that’s still in effect, that in an emergency instance, like an active shooter, we could take into our Real Time Crime Center that video” and provide it to responding officers, Reid said. “That’s something that’s unique in California. Not many school districts have it. And you guys had the foresight to do that about a decade ago.”

“No to police, yes to university” one sign reads in Spanish. (GV Wire/Nancy Price)

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Paul McCartney Becomes Britain’s First Billionaire Musician

DON'T MISS

California Cracked Down After a Crash Killed 13 Farmworkers. Why Are Workers Still Dying on the Road?

DON'T MISS

These Rare Chainsaws Are Worth Big Bucks to Collectors

DON'T MISS

Jewish Lobby Presses California Lawmakers to Combat Antisemitism

DON'T MISS

Opinion: How Urban Renewal Ruined Everything

DON'T MISS

California Wine Squeezed Dry: Insiders Say It’s Time to Pull up Acreage

DON'T MISS

Alabama Mercedes Employees Overwhelmingly Vote Against Joining Union, Slowing UAW Effort in South

DON'T MISS

Stock Market Today: Dow Finishes Above 40,000 to Cap Wall Street’s Latest Winning Week

DON'T MISS

Where Do State Lawmakers Stand on War in Gaza, Campus Protests?

DON'T MISS

High-Speed Rail Now Working to Extend Valley Line to 171 Miles

UP NEXT

Computer Science, History Students Selected for Fresno State’s Highest Academic Honors

UP NEXT

Lainey Wilson Triumphs at 2024 Academy of Country Music Awards

UP NEXT

California Teacher Who Says She Was Fired for Christian Beliefs Gets $360K

UP NEXT

Fresno State’s Class of ’24 by the Numbers. Which Major Has the Most Grads?

UP NEXT

Graduation for First Class of Clovis Medical School Doctors Set for Sunday

UP NEXT

Sonoma State President on Leave After Controversial Agreement with Gaza Protesters

UP NEXT

Suicide of 10-Year-Old Indiana Boy Linked to Horrific Bullying at School

UP NEXT

‘Mad Max’ Has Lived in George Miller’s Head for 45 Years. He’s Not Done Dreaming Yet.

UP NEXT

UC Merced Breaks Ground on $300M Medical Ed Building: ‘It Was Very Much a Dream’

UP NEXT

Sac State Order: No Investments That Profit From Genocide, Human Rights Abuses

Nancy Price,
Multimedia Journalist
Nancy Price is a multimedia journalist for GV Wire. A longtime reporter and editor who has worked for newspapers in California, Florida, Alaska, Illinois and Kansas, Nancy joined GV Wire in July 2019. She previously worked as an assistant metro editor for 13 years at The Fresno Bee. Nancy earned her bachelor's and master's degrees in journalism at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. Her hobbies include singing with the Fresno Master Chorale and volunteering with Fresno Filmworks. You can reach Nancy at 559-492-4087 or Send an Email

Jewish Lobby Presses California Lawmakers to Combat Antisemitism

2 days ago

Opinion: How Urban Renewal Ruined Everything

2 days ago

California Wine Squeezed Dry: Insiders Say It’s Time to Pull up Acreage

2 days ago

Alabama Mercedes Employees Overwhelmingly Vote Against Joining Union, Slowing UAW Effort in South

2 days ago

Stock Market Today: Dow Finishes Above 40,000 to Cap Wall Street’s Latest Winning Week

2 days ago

Where Do State Lawmakers Stand on War in Gaza, Campus Protests?

2 days ago

High-Speed Rail Now Working to Extend Valley Line to 171 Miles

2 days ago

Beautify Fresno Combines Dog Adoption, Litter Removal in Unique Saturday Event

2 days ago

Bulldogs’ Gilmore Named MW Softball Pitcher of the Year

2 days ago

The Latest | Dozens of Israeli Protesters Attack a Truck in an Apparent Effort to Block Gaza Aid

2 days ago

Paul McCartney Becomes Britain’s First Billionaire Musician

LONDON — Paul McCartney is a billionaire Beatle. According to figures released Friday, the former member of the Fab Four is the first Britis...

1 day ago

1 day ago

Paul McCartney Becomes Britain’s First Billionaire Musician

1 day ago

California Cracked Down After a Crash Killed 13 Farmworkers. Why Are Workers Still Dying on the Road?

1 day ago

These Rare Chainsaws Are Worth Big Bucks to Collectors

2 days ago

Jewish Lobby Presses California Lawmakers to Combat Antisemitism

2 days ago

Opinion: How Urban Renewal Ruined Everything

2 days ago

California Wine Squeezed Dry: Insiders Say It’s Time to Pull up Acreage

2 days ago

Alabama Mercedes Employees Overwhelmingly Vote Against Joining Union, Slowing UAW Effort in South

2 days ago

Stock Market Today: Dow Finishes Above 40,000 to Cap Wall Street’s Latest Winning Week

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend