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Speak Out: Do Police Officers Belong In Montgomery County Schools?

The debate surrounding school resource officers continues. Montgomery County Council members and the county police chief have suggested a roundtable to address the issue.

 

 

What place do police officers have in Montgomery County's public schools? 

The issue of how to fund school resource officers continues to baffle county officials.

The county's schools, police and council all recognize the benefit of the placing officers at local public high schools, but disagree as to its implementation and its scope.

Police Chief Thomas Manger in January told the council that adding officers to schools would greatly impact the department's ability to deal with youth crime.

With the budget cuts in previous years, only one SROs has been assigned to each police district, although previously the county boasted one officer per school cluster. The cities of Gaithersburg and Rockville supply officers to their city high schools, and the county provides supplemental coverage with five other county officers assigned to part-time duties at the schools.

Councilmember Craig Rice (D-Dist. 2) of Germantown supported adding a full complement of resource officers back into the schools this budget season. Barring that, he and Council Public Safety Committee Chair Phil Andrews (D-Dist. 3) of Gaithersburg, suggested assigning the five supplemental officers official SRO roles. 

“To me school resource officers are community policing at its best," Rice said. "A full complement of school resource officers is a great way in which we can attack the very problems that we get up here and talk about every day.” 

Councilmember Valerie Ervin (D-Dist. 5) of Silver Spring chairs the council education committee and said she wasn't ready to see the program fully reinstated.

"The issue is, who’s going to pay for them?" Ervin said. "I think we need a working group made up of parents, administrators, police officers and others to determine whether or not it is a good idea to expand the program."

As Ervin questioned the logistics of the program such as how many school buildings actually need to have an SRO and who would determine how that individual works, she also said she and her constituents were concerned with the impact of pulling officers off the streets to staff school programs.

"I was very surprised to hear from my constituents who would rather the council direct this money to cops on the street not the cops in school districts," Ervin said. "This was a huge issue with the IDA sector because last year the council made the determination to go ahead and fund SROs at the expense of actual police officers on the street."

Ervin said she found it difficult to justify the expense of paying for school resource officers out of the county budget, when Montgomery County Public Schools has a $2.3 billion operating budget. 

“I will not support adding anymore police officers to schools until we all sit down together and reach some sort of agreement,” she said.

The public safety committee ultimately recommended on Tuesday a sort of compromise between adding additional SROs and adding none.

"We ended up recommending that the department continue at least the same resource allocation now in the coming year, which has 11 officers assigned as SROs or assigned primarily to the schools," Andrews said.

The committee also asked the MCPD to continue looking into a plan to grow the program's staffing and to work with MCPS on drafting a new memorandum of understanding.

How that debate shapes out remains to be seen, but MCPS says it supports the SRO program as well.

"Dr. [Joshua] Starr has said that he believes in the school resource officer program as part of an overall effort to keep students safe at school," said MCPS spokesman Dana Tofig.

Manger told the council he is ready for a new trans-departmental discussion of the issue.

“I’ve had a couple of very brief conversations with the superintendent about the SRO program, and I think he has some very specific ideas,” Manger said. “I think the time for that conversation is here, and I’m happy to participate in that.

"The whole purpose of the SRO program in my opinion is to provide a safe learning environment for kids in our schools. I want kids to go to schools and not every have to think about the fact that they might not be safe.”

What do you think is the best solution? Should the county allocate more resources to staffing officers at public schools? Should this be the responsibility of Montgomery County Public Schools? How would the program work?

Related Topics: Montgomery County Public Schools, Montgomery County police, School Security, school resource officers, and youth crime

Beth

3:52 pm on Thursday, May 10, 2012

Yes, WITHOUT QUESTION THEY DO! Schools are daytime communities for our youth and require public safety too. Where else can the police touch thousands of youth lives, interact with and get to know there citizens better? The SRO program has proven its value time and time again. Having police in our communities doesn't produce a negative image and regularly seeing them in the schools gives me a small piece of mind. IOW ... it's not about thinking the kids might not be safe, it's about thinking they may be MORE safe!

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Katie Griffith

4:32 pm on Thursday, May 10, 2012

Thanks for the comment, Beth! What do you think about the logistics of the program? Who should pay the officers salaries?

Laurie Halverson

6:27 pm on Thursday, May 10, 2012

Note to Valerie Ervin who is looking for constituency feedback: MCCPTA, which represents nearly 50,000 members, has passed a resolution in favor of SROs in high schools as well as support for middle schools. Representatives from 200 schools county-wide voted on this. So Valerie can take the number of phone calls she receives opposed to SROs and compare that to the 50,000 parents, teachers, and students who support SROs.
http://mccpta.net/resolutions/2010-2011/Adopted_SRO_Resolution.pdf

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Online addict

10:16 am on Friday, May 11, 2012

Fifty thousand strong, the MCCPTA does a stellar job, keep up the good work!

Susan Burkinshaw

7:45 pm on Thursday, May 10, 2012

MCPD 5D Ofc Russ Larson won the MCPS John Queen award for excellence today. He is in the schools every day, not because our schools are not safe, but to ensure the safety of our schools and the surrounding communities.

Prevention and intervention is the key here, and Ofc Larson, in addition to the other phenomenal SROs currently deployed, should be a model to follow--it should be a priority for our county to ensure that we have an officer in every middle and high school.

You can't quantify the thousands of small, but nonetheless great, things these officers do every day in our schools that add up to safer learning environments (with higher test scores) and communities.

http://www.mymcpnews.com/2012/05/10/school-resource-officer-russ-larson-receives-mc-public-school-award/

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Katie Griffith

8:05 pm on Thursday, May 10, 2012

I just came to this page to post that link, Susan -- you beat me to it! Thanks for the comment!

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Online addict

10:19 am on Friday, May 11, 2012

Great link Susan! This is what I see at schools all the time and it is truly a great thing, these officers do more than folks realize and they are often so underappreciated by those who do not see them in action.

Jeff Hawkins

8:05 am on Friday, May 11, 2012

Do Police officers belong in Montgomery County Schools?

No.....

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Online addict

9:15 am on Friday, May 11, 2012

As a parent, I see the interactions between the SRO and the students and it is definitely a POSITIVE experience! Through these interactions, the students learn that the police are there to help, protect and support activities at the school. Students are constantly talking with them, asking questions; the relationships are priceless.

For those who say "NO" to SROs, they are showing a "Fixed-Mindset" were they believe the police are there as prison wardens, looking to arrest and harass, such a sad view of the world. Talk to the students, who benefit from the SROs, before making such slanted decisions.

Thank you to all the SROs who serve in Montgomery County! You are great role models and as a parent, I salute you!!

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Jeff Hawkins

9:34 am on Friday, May 11, 2012

@Online addict
"For those who say "NO" to SROs, they are showing a "Fixed-Mindset" were they believe the police are there as prison wardens, looking to arrest and harass, such a sad view of the world."

Got any proof for that statement? or are you showing a "Fixed-Mindset" concerning those that disagree with you?

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