Current:Home > MyTexas wanted armed officers at every school after Uvalde. Many can’t meet that standard -CapitalSource
Texas wanted armed officers at every school after Uvalde. Many can’t meet that standard
NovaQuant Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-09 18:27:19
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A vision of armed officers at every school in Texas is crashing into the reality of not enough money or police as a new mandate took effect Friday, showing how a goal more states are embracing in response to America’s cycle of mass killings is proving unworkable in many communities.
Dozens of Texas’ largest school districts, which educate many of the state’s 5 million students, are reopening classrooms without meeting the state’s new requirements of armed officers on every campus. The mandate is a pillar of a safety bill signed by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who rejected calls this year for gun control despite angry pleas from parents of children killed in the Uvalde school massacre.
Texas has nearly 9,000 public school campuses, second only to California, making the requirement the largest of its kind in the U.S.
“We all support the idea,” said Stephanie Elizalde, superintendent of the Dallas Independent School District, which has more than 140,000 students. “The biggest challenge for all superintendents is that this is yet again an unfunded mandate.”
The difficulties lay bare limits of calls to put armed guards at every school, more than a decade after the National Rifle Association championed the idea in the face of an intense push for stronger gun laws following the Sandy Hook Elementary massacre in 2012.
The new Texas law allows exceptions but also does not require districts to report compliance, making it unclear how many schools are meeting the standard.
But by all accounts, many are not.
The Associated Press contacted 60 of Texas’ largest school districts about whether they were able to start the school year in compliance. The districts, which cut across a wide swath of Texas, from rapidly growing suburbs to the U.S.-Mexico border, enroll more than 2.7 million students combined.
Not all districts responded and some declined to discuss staffing levels, citing security concerns. But statements to the AP, along with a review of school board meeting actions and statements made to local media, show at least half have been unable to comply with the law’s highest standard.
A major struggle is staffing elementary schools, where officers are traditionally less common. But those campuses came under calls for more protection after a gunman killed 19 fourth-graders and two teachers last year at Robb Elementary School — a tragedy in which the failures were not over a lack of police, who were on the scene within minutes, but the inaction of hundreds of officers once they arrived.
Spokesperson for Abbott did not respond to questions about the rollout of the law. The Texas Education Agency did not address questions about concerns raised by schools and instead provided criteria for districts to seek an exception.
“How these exceptions look locally is determined by the school district’s board, and they must develop an alternative safety standard with which the district is able to comply,” spokesman Jake Kobersky said.
But local school officials say the additional funding Texas gave districts under the new law, about $15,000 per campus, is hardly sufficient. In Dallas, Elizalde said an extra $75,000 is needed for each additional officer in Texas’ second-largest district.
In the scramble to comply with Texas’ new standards, options some districts previously never considered are now on the table: Some are turning to private security firms or arming more staff and teachers.
“This is probably new to everybody at this stage of the game. It’s expensive,” said Charles Hollis, director of operations at L&P Global Security in Dallas, which until this year had not put guards at public schools. The company now has contracts with four booming districts and is in talks with four others.
The combination of not enough money for officers, and not enough of them to fill thousands of openings across the U.S., is an ongoing struggle in cities nationwide. Last month, a small Minnesota town lost its police department altogether after officers resigned over low pay and pursued better opportunities elsewhere.
The national shortfall of officers has hampered other states’ attempts to patrol all schools. Florida struggled in 2018 when the state became the nation’s first to require an armed officer on every campus following the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
In Tennessee, following an elementary school shooting in March, the state offered police departments extra funding to staff every school. But police in Nashville, Tennessee’s largest city, rejected most of the money.
“With the level of our staffing, we can’t pull 70 officers from the streets of Nashville,” Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake told reporters in July.
Joy Baskin, education counsel for the Texas Association of School Boards, said all mandates come with a price tag. “But I think this is the biggest one I can remember in more than 25 years of talking to districts,” she said.
In San Antonio, the Southside Independent School District was able to start the year with enough officers, who make between $23 and $30 an hour. Don Tijerina, the district’s police chief, said it wouldn’t take any of them long to find jobs elsewhere.
“Bottom line: The demand is so high right now,” he said.
___
LaFleur reported from Dallas. Associated Press writer Jonathan Mattise in Nashville, Tennessee, contributed to this report.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Danger in the water: Fatal attacks, bites from sharks rose in 2023. Surfers bitten the most.
- Joel Embiid to undergo procedure on knee, miss significant time with Philadelphia 76ers
- Tarek El Moussa Details Gun Incident That Led to Christina Hall Split
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Miley Cyrus wins first Grammy of her career for Flowers
- 2024 Grammys: Olivia Rodrigo and Taylor Swift Prove Feud Rumors Are Old News
- 2 women killed days apart in same area in Indianapolis, police say
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Like Spider-Man, you may have your very own 'canon event.' Here's what that means.
Ranking
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- CNN changes morning show lineup again, adds extra Kasie Hunt hour
- Senators release border-Ukraine deal that would allow the president to pause U.S. asylum law and quickly deport migrants
- The 58 greatest Super Bowl moments in NFL history: What was all-time best play?
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Black and Latina women helped propel gains for unions in 2023, finds a new study
- Where's Ray Wright? High-speed chase leads to clues in Sacramento man's abduction and revenge murder
- 16-year-old killers of U.K. transgender teen Brianna Ghey sentenced to life in prison
Recommendation
South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
These are the largest Black-owned businesses in America
Police raided George Pelecanos' home. 15 years later, he's ready to write about it
Taylor Swift Squashes Celine Dion Grammys Snub Rumors With Backstage Picture
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
Could a nearby 'super Earth' have conditions to support life? Astronomers hope to find out
Blue Ivy Steals the Show While Jay-Z Accepts 2024 Grammys Global Impact Award
Richard Caster, a 3-time Pro Bowl tight end and wide receiver for the Jets, dies at 75