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Students testify about safety agent abuses before Council hearing

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Jeffrey Paulino, 17, said he had been assaulted by a school safety agent at his Bronx high school.

Rallying before a City Council hearing today on a more than year-old school safety proposal, advocates renewed their call for a law that would force the city to issue quarterly reports on school violence.

Introduced in 2008 by Robert Jackson, chairman of the City Council education committee, the School Safety Act has the support of 33 of the Council’s 50 members as well as advocacy groups like the New York Civil Liberties Union. Lost amid the debate over term limits last year, the act has seen little movement in the Council.

The act would require the Department of Education and Police Department to report arrests, suspensions, and expulsion data on a quarterly basis, along with a demographic breakdown of the students involved in school incidents.

Critics of police presence in schools have long complained that the 5,000 school safety agents in the city’s public schools are too aggressive with students and get involved in disciplinary cases better handled by school administrators.

At the rally today, several students spoke about the alleged abuse they had experienced from school safety agents.

Adama Wint, a 17 year-old who attends a Young Adult Borough Center in the Bronx, said safety agents in her school regularly make sexual comments to female students.

“They talk about what we have on and how appealing we are to them,” Wint said. “It’s a little bit out of hand.”

Jeffrey Paulino, an eleventh grade student at the Community High School for Social Justice in the Bronx, said a school safety agent hit his head with a flashlight and then tried to choke him. Paulino said he blacked out and was taken to the local police precinct where, he alleged, he had to beg for officers to call an ambulance.

“They treated me like an animal,” Paulino, 17, said, adding that the subsequent court dates had pulled him out of class and prevented him from participating in after-school activities.

Last week, the city settled a lawsuit over alleged abuse of a Queens high schoolstudent by a school safety agent.

3 Comments

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  1. QueensParent

    If you are going to report on this, which is essentially another do-nothing piece of legislation — my God, an entire law requiring the production of a report — I think you also ought to talk about the number of school kids who have been murdered near schools since the school year began. Clearly, there is a NEED for safety agents. Here’s another one of those “guilt by association” posts: since there are a few bad safety agents, then all safety agents must be bad. I thought only FOX NEWS did this kind of reporting.

  2. The OORS (Occurance Online Reporting System) requires schools to enter ALL data relating to “incidents” immediately, the system produces detailed school specfic reports. The OORS reports can be disaggregated and are commonly used by schools to deploy Safety Agents and track discipline issues in schools.

    In my experience the School Safety folk are quite responsive.

    If there are abuses by School Safety agents they should be reported immediately.

  3. md

    Well its easy to say Security guards are good, some are but if your a student you go to school every day you have to deal with it! I especially feel bad for those who are in schools with metal detectors. the testimonies in this hearing were so crazy

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