Matt Bromme is a former principal and Superintendent of District 27 in Queens.
When I first became a
school Principal at P.S. 88 in District 24 , School Safety Agents
were employees of the New York City Board of Education. They reported to the
Principal or his designee. The School Safety Agents would meet with the
Principal, discuss their assignment, the time they would take lunch and their
break. This was especially true in the elementary schools where there was
only one School Safety Agent usually assigned to the building.
Then when I became a Middle
School Principal at MS 210 in District 27, I had multiple School Safety
Agents assigned to my building because of prior incidents,. They were still employed by the Board of
Education and so the rules of engagement were still the same. We worked
out schedules and assignments together.
I
was still Principal of MS 210 when Rudy Giuliani was elected Mayor. He pushed
for the School Safety Agents to become part of the NYPD. As a union
representative of the Council of Supervisors and Administrators, I opposed that
move.
Due to political pressure on Chancellor Rudy Crew and Deputy Harry
Spence, the Central Board of Education agreed and in late 1998, the School
Safety Agents were overnight assigned to the NYPD and became civilian NYPD
employees. The New York City Charter was also amended to require reporting of
crimes by school employees to the NYPD. The Mayor kept feeding the tabloids
with any and all stories of how the NYPD would improve safety in the schools and
how weak we Principals were on discipline. He had already forced Ray
Cortines out as Chancellor, and in a short time he would do the same to Rudy
Crew.
I
had some really great SSA officers. However, I was also assigned some
that I could not trust. To get them moved, I had to deal with the local
precinct that had no loyalty to my school.
The
transfer of SSA to the NYPD also changed their roles in the school
dramatically. They now were reporting to a Precinct Lieutenant or Sergeant.
They no longer would leave their post which was assigned by their Sergeant, so
there was no crossing of streets to stop incidents from occurring. The patrol,
break and lunch schedules were no longer discussed with the Principal.
They made the final decision regarding arrests and whether or not an
emotionally challenged student would be put into handcuffs, even if the
professionals believed he/she should go to the hospital instead. Another issue
was that there was no one responsible for their training in developing relationships
with students, parents and staff.
I
will give you an example: I had a student try to commit suicide. He was going
to jump out of the fourth floor window. We stopped him, but because he was so
agitated, he struck one of the officers. I had to argue for sending him to the
hospital instead of arresting him for assault.
Second
example: When I supervised my SSA, and there was a fight among students
across the street, when I crossed the street, they crossed with me. Once they
were placed under NYPD, SSAs could not move from their predetermined post
unless this was agreed to by a Lieutenant who never visited the school. So if
there was a fight outside the school building or school yard, I and my staff
were on our own. It made the situation far more dangerous.
Although
I believe there are many schools where the School Safety Agents work
professionally with the students, parents and staff, I will always insist that
the Principal, based on input from everyone, should be the decision maker on
how to address student discipline and safety issues in the school. At the end
of the day, the Principal is responsible for everyone in the building.
Therefore, he or she should have the ability to supervise, train and schedule
School Safety Agents, for the safety of students and staff.
2 comments:
Matt. So true So true. When I was at Stevenson, from 1970-86, teh SSO's were indeed far more reliable because they had to answer to my bosses, the Principals who were in charge of school atmosphere. My first two were exemplar...Leonard Littwin, and Myrna Wohlberg. For 14 years under the two of them we were a far safer school than the Press ( as they were called then) wanted the world to know. Why? Because fo those 2 individuals, the SSOs we all worked with and respected, and the three police officers assigned to us from the 43rd. 2 of them, Rich Iskiwitz, and Larry Williams were were incredible. Theyeach went on to be the precinct you officers. There were tough, fair, caring, and humanitarian. They were respected by all and loved by some kids.. Of course the gang members were not in that group.
Then a new Principal rode into town. With his own SSO chief ( nicknamed Skunk). Ours left. The PO at the time, Officer Williams left, . Many of us left. I left. The magic that was AES left.
Say did you ever read my book (Doing The Right Thing: A Teacher Speaks) or read my blog? (https://wordpress.com/view/dcgmentor.wordpress.com)
I wholeheartedly disagree. Quite frankly the whole argument comes down to a power grab by Principals and the DOE in order to gain control of one of the independent thorns in their sides. The DOE wants more control over their safety stats. I say no. Most of the issues discussed could be solved by coming to some kind of agreement between the DOE and NYPD to create a process that gives Principals some way of addressing things like lunch scheduling issues. As a teacher and former Chapter Leader I can speak first hand to the under-reporting and strong desire by Principals to sweep aside safety events in their schools. Their independence is the only thing even remotely keeping the inmates from running the asylum.
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