Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Cops on Campus? School District Decision Could Take Months.
NANCY WEBSITE HEADSHOT 1
By Nancy Price, Multimedia Journalist
Published 4 years ago on
December 16, 2020

Share

Should police officers be employed to provide security on school campuses? Criticism of policing that grew after the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police on Memorial Day and subsequent rallies that called for the defunding of police departments have fueled discussions among trustees at Fresno’s largest school district over the role of police officers at schools.

Fresno Unified employs Fresno city police and Fresno County sheriff’s deputies as school resource and neighborhood school resource officers to provide campus security, including making arrests. But now some trustees have argued that the district should consider not renewing those contracts, which continued even while schools were closed because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The School Board delayed renewing the contracts earlier this year to provide time to hear from school communities.

The district is launching a two-pronged effort to examine the issue and provide recommendations to the board. At Wednesday’s meeting, trustees will vote on a $48,900 proposal for a research project to gauge how parents and school staff feel about having cops on campus.

The survey project would be lead by Fresno State sociology professor Andrew Jones and comes on the heels of community surveys conducted by the university’s sociology department for the Fresno Commission for Police Reform, which issued a 292-page report in October with 73 recommendations that included establishing a new civilian oversight board.

The Commission also recommended that the city not hire out its police officers to school districts.

Students’ Input Sought

In addition to the Fresno State research project, the district is working to coordinate student focus groups to discuss the issue through several of its divisions including Equity and Access, Communications, Operational Services, and African American Academic Acceleration.

The district is creating 15 groups of middle and high school students whose parents have received or will receive letters to inform them about the upcoming focus groups their kids are being invited to participate in. The students are racially and ethnically diverse and include English learners, foster and homeless students, and students with disabilities, staffers reported to the board last Friday.

The focus groups will begin Jan. 18 and end Feb. 5. Information from the focus groups would be shared with the board by the end of February.

The university-led project, which would include surveys and focus groups for parents and staff, would present its results by April, according to the proposal. The materials, which would be provided in English, Spanish, and Hmong, would be advertised through community-based organizations such as Barrios Unidos.

Bad for Kids?

Critics say that having police officers on campus can put students on the path to prison, especially students of color.

But Jason Lehman, a Long Beach police sergeant and founder of the nonprofit Why’d You Stop Me? that aims to reduce violence through police and community training, told GV Wireâ„  that school resource officers are trained to develop relationships with students and be less of the “enforcer” as is the officer on the street.

But school-based officers will make arrests if they see crimes being committed, such as a student selling drugs, said Lehman, who was in the Valley last week for police training sessions in Madera and Fresno.

For those students who do get in trouble, Lehman said, “it’s aspects of the system that are failing our youth. But I think that we attribute it to the school resource officer being a catalyst of the school-to-prison pipeline. And I completely disagree with that.”

He said schools that replace trained officers with security guards are risking student safety. In Long Beach Unified, six of the seven major schools voted to replace police with security officers, who are armed but don’t undergo the same weapons training as police, he said.

In the event of an active shooter incident on a campus, students will be safer if a police officer is already there, Lehman said: “Being armed and being trained are two different things.”

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Trustees Select Fresno Unified’s New Superintendent. Was ‘the Fix’ On?

DON'T MISS

Costa Assails House Budget Bill Passed by GOP. Why Did Valadao Miss Key Vote?

DON'T MISS

Fresno City Council Opposes Parole for the ‘Tower Rapist’

DON'T MISS

Sanger Police Seek Public’s Help in Locating Missing At-Risk Teen

DON'T MISS

Fresno Police Shoot Suspect in Head After Hostage Situation Near Manchester Center

DON'T MISS

Valley Crime Stoppers Offers $25,000 Reward to Find Escaped Murderer

DON'T MISS

‘Independent’ Vang Starts Work as New Fresno Councilmember. Cancels Tavlian Contract.

DON'T MISS

He Spent Decades Researching Dementia. Trump’s DEI Purge Killed His Grant, and Dozens More

DON'T MISS

Other States Do Housing Better Than California; a New Study Shows How They Do It

DON'T MISS

Trump Administration Task Force to Consider Declassifying COVID-19 Origins Materials

UP NEXT

This Is Fresno Unified’s Last Chance to Get It Right: Editorial

UP NEXT

Fresno Native Denise Whisenhunt Returns Home to Lead City College

UP NEXT

Transparency Concerns Arise Again as Fresno Unified Superintendent Interviews Begin

UP NEXT

Golden Charter Academy Scholars Dig Deep for a Greener Fresno

UP NEXT

How Schools Can Help Students Facing Homelessness Get to Class

UP NEXT

These Fresno First-Graders Are Topping Their Peers in Reading

UP NEXT

Camalah Saleh Cruises to Win in Stormy Fresno State Student Elections

UP NEXT

Politics Turns Ugly for a Conservative Running for Fresno State Student Body President

UP NEXT

State Center Trustees Render Split Decision on Future of PLAs

UP NEXT

How Safe Is It to Walk to School? Fresno County Wants to Find Out

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

Sanger Police Seek Public’s Help in Locating Missing At-Risk Teen

11 hours ago

Fresno Police Shoot Suspect in Head After Hostage Situation Near Manchester Center

11 hours ago

Valley Crime Stoppers Offers $25,000 Reward to Find Escaped Murderer

11 hours ago

‘Independent’ Vang Starts Work as New Fresno Councilmember. Cancels Tavlian Contract.

12 hours ago

He Spent Decades Researching Dementia. Trump’s DEI Purge Killed His Grant, and Dozens More

13 hours ago

Other States Do Housing Better Than California; a New Study Shows How They Do It

13 hours ago

Trump Administration Task Force to Consider Declassifying COVID-19 Origins Materials

13 hours ago

At the Supreme Court, the Trump Agenda Is Always an ‘Emergency’

13 hours ago

Wing of Plane Carrying 6 Members of Congress Is Clipped at Reagan Airport

13 hours ago

Trump Repeals Biden-Era Limit on Water Flow in Shower Heads

14 hours ago

Trustees Select Fresno Unified’s New Superintendent. Was ‘the Fix’ On?

Trustees have begun negotiations on a contract to make Misty Her the next Fresno Unified superintendent, multiple sources tell GV Wire. Her ...

9 hours ago

9 hours ago

Trustees Select Fresno Unified’s New Superintendent. Was ‘the Fix’ On?

9 hours ago

Costa Assails House Budget Bill Passed by GOP. Why Did Valadao Miss Key Vote?

10 hours ago

Fresno City Council Opposes Parole for the ‘Tower Rapist’

The Sanger Police Department is seeking the public's help in locating Mellissa Rocker, 15, who went missing from her home on Saturday, April 5, 2024, and was last seen in Fresno. (Sanger PD)
11 hours ago

Sanger Police Seek Public’s Help in Locating Missing At-Risk Teen

Fresno police shot a female suspect in the head on Thursday, April 10, 2025, after she took a woman hostage with a knife near Manchester Center, and the suspect remains in critical condition while the hostage was unharmed. (Fresno PD)
11 hours ago

Fresno Police Shoot Suspect in Head After Hostage Situation Near Manchester Center

Authorities in Delano are searching for escaped inmate Cesar Hernandez, 34, who fled CDCR custody Tuesday and is considered dangerous. (Delano PD)
11 hours ago

Valley Crime Stoppers Offers $25,000 Reward to Find Escaped Murderer

12 hours ago

‘Independent’ Vang Starts Work as New Fresno Councilmember. Cancels Tavlian Contract.

13 hours ago

He Spent Decades Researching Dementia. Trump’s DEI Purge Killed His Grant, and Dozens More

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend