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Massachusetts High School Wants National Guard Deployed to Deal With Disruptions

Massachusetts High School Wants National Guard Deployed to Deal With Disruptions

“These situations not only put the students and staff at risk but also undermines the overall safety of our community”

This is happening in the city of Brockton where the inmates are apparently running the asylum.

FOX News reports:

Massachusetts high school pleads National Guard quell ‘shocking levels of chaos and violence’ among students

A group of Massachusetts educators are pleading for Gov. Maura Healey to deploy National Guard troops to Brockton High School to help quell what teachers described as “shocking levels of chaos and violence” among the students there, posing serious security concerns over the past several months.

In a letter last week, four Brockton School Committee members – Joyce Asack, Tony Rodrigues, Claudio Gomes and Ana Oliver – asked that Brockton Mayor Robert Sullivan request temporary National Guard support at Brockton High School from Healey to address “a disturbing increase in incidents related to violence, security concerns, and substance abuse.”

“Recent events at Brockton High School have prompted us to seek immediate assistance to prevent a potential tragedy,” the letter, obtained by several local news outlets, read. “The situation has reached a critical point, more recently we had an alarming 35 teachers absent, underscoring the severity of the challenges we are facing.”

The letter said instances of students wandering the halls, engaging in altercations and causing disruptions in classrooms “have become alarmingly frequent.”

“These incidents are not only undermining the learning environment but are also jeopardizing the integrity of the state-wide testing process,” roughly half of the committee wrote. “As concerned members of the school committee, we are reaching out to you with the hope that the City and State can provide assistance and support in addressing this urgent matter.”

The letter pointed to a recent spike in students leaving school grounds without permission, as well as trespassers on school property, citing “a lack of adequate staffing” at entrances and exits.”

“These situations not only put the students and staff at risk but also undermines the overall safety of our community,” the letter said.

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Comments

What have they done to deal with this themselves? Something? Suspensions? Arrests? Anything?

The Gentle Grizzly | February 20, 2024 at 12:00 pm

What ever happened to expulsions?

The expelled delinquents eventually ended up as cannon fodder for The War of the Week, or as janitors, ditch diggers, or other menials. That seemed to have worked better than “oh, he or she is just misunderstood…”

    Publius_2020 in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | February 20, 2024 at 3:26 pm

    Expulsion was essentially outlawed in Massachusetts ten years ago under MA Chapter 222. Basically, suspensions are limited to 90 TOTAL days (not consecutive days), and the district MUST, by law, provide education to the student during any suspension. Poor districts cannot afford individualized education programs, so they are effectively forced to allow students to continue in class.

But if the NG is tied up in Brockton schools, who will provide escort service next time a brown face shows up on Martha’s Vineyard?

destroycommunism | February 20, 2024 at 1:03 pm

the school was quick to also explain:

we still dont want the police here

but the national guard is “different”

destroycommunism | February 20, 2024 at 1:08 pm

see,,we have reached such a level of lefty run censorship >>>fear

that the teachers would have called for more police but THATTTT owuld set off certain 503 501c tax free groups

instead the call for the national guard so it

SOUNDS/SEEMS like its not a local call

they did the same thing that NIXON GOT BLAMED FOR AT KENT OHIO

and of course the lying infamous song by neil young

it was the Dems who called for the Guard so that THEY WOULDT BE RESPONSIBLE

BUT AS USUAL

THE LEFTY TRICKERY IS CALLED OUT

destroycommunism | February 20, 2024 at 1:10 pm

btw

the other articles on this said the “Students”

are having se x and doing dr ugs IN THE CLASSROOMS

where do they think they are at?

the white house?????

People are missing the entire picture here. This is impacting state wide testing which impacts funding. That is why they suddenly are concerned

What a marvelous opportunity to bring in consultants from Harvard.

Let them show the world how it OUGHT to be done.

And the whole project can — in real time, going forward — be monitored/audited by an impartial third-party consultant.

C’mon Harvard, show us wat you got

    They already have. Gay, after committing educational heresy, while students were expelled for such things, was crowned with an “atta girl” ribbon, and a $900,000 tenured professorship, pretty much destroying 400 years of “supposed” honesty. Ha!

I am reminded of what happened in the St. Paul, Minnesota school system. Black students got a disproportionate number of expulsions and suspensions. The assumption by well-meaning liberals was that this was due to racist disciplinary policies. Unfortunately for the well-meaning liberals, blacks exhibited disproportionate behavior problems (which anyone who has taught could have told you) which resulted in disproportionate expulsions and suspensions. St. Paul: New discipline policy sows dissatisfaction. In St. Paul, administrators dealt with disparities in discipline by reducing suspensions and expulsions. In the end, the superintendent was fired and few were happy with the result.

In 2011, Aaron Benner noticed a change in his sixth-grade classroom at Benjamin E. Mays, a high-poverty, mostly black public school in St. Paul, Minn. Benner is athletic and African-American, and he gets along well with kids. But that year, he said, students were acting out more, misbehaving more.
“Daily disruptions were breaking my heart,” he said.
One day he was playing football with a boy at recess, when the bell rang. Benner had just thrown a pass, but the student had dropped the ball. Benner went to console him and walk him into the building, but the boy turned around and punched him. So Benner brought him to the principal’s office. A few minutes later the principal brought him back to Benner’s room.
“Never in 16 years of teaching did I have someone assault me and not be reprimanded,” Benner said.
“I didn’t want this student to be incarcerated or expelled, but I wanted a consequence. So that’s when the light bulb finally went off for me. I thought ‘Oh. Something’s going wrong here at St. Paul public schools.'”
Benner blamed the school district’s new discipline guidelines. The district had tried to address disparities in discipline by trying to reduce the number of suspensions and expulsions.
St. Paul’s efforts grew out of a series of problems familiar to many cities. The number of school-age children in St. Paul had been declining. The percentage of those kids who attended traditional public school was dropping, too: Families were choosing private or charter schools instead. Children who did go to public school were needier.

The school superintendent got fired in 2016. I haven’t yet found out information on how St. Paul schools fared after she was fired. She got a golden parachute of some $700,000.

https://thefederalist.com/2016/07/29/federal-racial-discipline-quotas-create-chaos-in-st-paul-schools/

Here is an update, albeit nine months old, on the St. Paul school system. Once again, well-intentioned liberals fell flat on their faces by taking cops out of the St. Paul schools. St. Paul school surveys after stabbing death show desire for tougher student consequences

Students, staff and parents want tougher consequences for student misbehavior, along with more mental health support and perhaps the return of school resource officers, according to St. Paul Public Schools surveys conducted following a fatal stabbing at Harding High School….
A summary presented to the school board Tuesday showed hallways and restrooms were clear trouble spots: 28 percent of student respondents said they feel unsafe in school hallways and 23 percent in restrooms.
Traveling home from school was next, with 11 percent of students feeling unsafe.

Here is something that appears to have worked.

Although restrooms are another problem spot for St. Paul high schools, their design makes a big difference. Thirty-one percent of students said they feel unsafe in traditional group restrooms that separate boys from girls, while just 12 percent feel unsafe in new gender-neutral, single-occupancy restrooms like those at Como Park, Humboldt and Johnson high schools.
“It really takes away a lot of the opportunity for groups to congregate in areas that are hard to supervise,” Superintendent Joe Gothard said of the single-occupancy stalls. .

The school board voted in 2020 to removed police from schools as a result to the George Floyd death and riots.. Most principals opposed the move. Currently students and parents want them back.

Somewhat more popular, at least among high school students and their parents, was to bring back school resource officers, who the school board removed after the 2020 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis and replaced with unarmed safety liaisons.
A group of high school principals met with the school board this spring to endorse bringing the officers back because principals “do not have the training to disarm students with weapons,” Arzamendia said.
The idea also ranked highly among parents and school staff. But while 78 percent of students said it’s a “good idea” to post police officers in schools, they liked several other ideas better.

A good school cop spends a lot of time schmoozing with students, enabling him to get a pulse on what is going on.

Let’s have the student newspaper at Harvard investigate this story

Brockton high school is the largest in the state of MA, and it is 60% black.

National Guard?! What’s wrong with the plain old police? Surely this is exactly what they are for.

And it shouldn’t matter what the school thinks of it; it’s not private property, it’s city property and the police are the city, so surely they don’t need anyone’s permission to be there.

Funny, I went to high school in the 1960s, and as far as I can remember, high schools in the 50s and 60s had no National Guardspersons, no police, no security guards, and no disruptions to require them — even schools in poor areas, even racially-segregated schools.
Gee, I wonder what changed…

    henrybowman in reply to Philosopher1. | February 21, 2024 at 8:57 pm

    But we did have a faculty monitor at the door to the smoking room, to admit only those who had parental permission slips on file.

Teachers not showing up for work because students are doing drugs and having sex in class, and getting into fights and brining weapons. High school is over 60% black. So blame “institutional racism” ? Maybe change the name of the school?

If a republican invited the National Guard into the local schools, can you imagine shrieking

If a country in Africa or South America or Asia requested military intervention on behalf of the local schools, can you imagine the shrieking

Maybe the United Nations should investigate Brockton, Massachusetts

Maybe the governor of Massachusetts should be brought to the UN International Court of Justice for human rights violations, apartheid, and crimes against humanity

Brockton is 27% white, 51% African-American. -Wikipedia

    smooth in reply to Alan Lang. | February 21, 2024 at 3:02 pm

    Brockton is what happens when blacks are given authority to manage all their own affairs. Like haiti.

      Jvj1975 in reply to smooth. | February 21, 2024 at 5:46 pm

      I simply cannot fathom how any of this could be happening — After all, there are so many educated people right near by.

      And those educated people tell us constantly how good they are and how elite they are

      Why, there’s harvard and Boston University and MIT and there’s Tufts and there’s Amherst and there’s Williams and there’s Brown University too

      Surely there must be some kind of a mistake in the reporting. Brockton surely must be an a very average school system with above average levels of academic achievement. A regular Lake Winston.

      In fact, it’s not just higher education elites right near by—no, there’s also elite , better than you high schools like a hosts and Belmont and Phillips all nearby Surely they have exchange programs for disseminating all that makes these people and institutions elite

      Where are the better than you and me senators from MA — Elizabeth Warren and
      Ed Markey. They are democrats and they care. And they always tell us how they know how to heal the worlds various problems

      Surely they’ve got this under control already

      Surely , very soon we will be reading about the Brockton Schools Miracle

      ——-

      Sheesh what a relief it is knowing that so many elite and wealthy and good people are within minutes from Brockton

      henrybowman in reply to smooth. | February 21, 2024 at 9:08 pm

      50 years ago, Brockton was just another slowly-dying Massachusetts white mill town, with a predominantly Portuguese subculture. I used to drive there regularly to buy size 16A boots from King Size, because you couldn’t get those off the rack at Payless and K-Mart. Now they’re a national company that left Brockton for the Internet and Amazon, and neither one of us have to deal with Brockton any longer.

Lake Wobegon