School board updates district safety plan following April 1 incident at Red Jacket High School - Fingerlakes1.com

2022-04-24 07:38:48 By : Ms. Carolin Pang

News, Weather, Sports & Entertainment for the Finger Lakes

The Manchester-Shortsville School Board unveiled some planned changes on Wednesday following an incident earlier this month where a Red Jacket High School student brought a loaded handgun to school.

The board’s meeting was packed with parents, some of whom offered heavy criticism to the board for cutting certain safety measures out of the school budget prior to the incident at Red Jacket on April 1.

Manchester-Shortsville CSD plans to bring a School Resource Officer to help keep students and staff safes as part of their updated safety protocol plan. pic.twitter.com/udBbt3W3gq

— Patrick Moussignac (@WHEC_Moussignac) April 20, 2022

The incident involving a 15-year-old boy who brought a loaded gun and extra magazine to school brought great fear to students and families alike. One staff member- reported to be Red Jacket Principal Mark Bracy- has been called a hero for calming the armed student down and eventually disarming him. Ontario County Sheriff Phil Povero said the staff member spoke to the student for hours.

The school board plans to bring on a school resource officer (SRO) as part of their revised safety protocol plan, the board announced at their Wednesday, April 20 meeting. Additionally, the district has added swipe card access to exterior doors, a new PA system, and thumb turn locks on all classroom and office doors, according to News10 NBC.

One parent identified only as “Dusty” said “As a leader, you have failed. Your faculty, students, and community do not trust you,” addressing the board at Wednesday’s meeting.

Parents pointed out that the district used to have a SRO before the position was cut out of the school budget.

“You get rid of an SRO because of a budget cut, but nobody forgoes their raises. What’s more important, the safety of those kids, or this school’s monetary value?” asked a parent known only as “Isaac.”

Still, other parents said they did not want an SRO in schools, particularly one from the Sheriff’s Department when there are other options available, like hiring a retired veteran or someone from a private security company.