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Classroom locked-door law revisions target sheriffs' concerns
Classroom locked-door law revisions target sheriffs' concerns

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Classroom locked-door law revisions target sheriffs' concerns

A fence stands around Sneads High School in the Panhandle. (Photo by Jay Waagmeester/Florida Phoenix) Florida's sheriffs asked for legislative clarification of a 'clunky' 2024 school-safety law. Lawmakers responded, sending classroom door-locking revisions through both chambers. Last summer, Polk County Sheriff Grady Judge espressed concern that law enforcement officers might unintentionally violate state laws designed to lock out threatening people. 'You know, we passed this legislation last year, and it's unfortunate that the Marjory Stoneman Douglas Commission had to request that it be passed in the first place,' Judd told the Phoenix in a phone interview. 'But, despite our best efforts, there were some schools and some administrators who weren't keeping the doors locked,' he continued. His county didn't have that problems but that other counties did, he said. Judd said the law, before amended, was 'clunky and difficult to understand and easy to violate it even without the intent to violate it.' Legislative clarification may be needed on school safety law, commission says Lawmakers passed SB 1470 during the last week of the scheduled legislative session. The bill builds on the school guardian program, developed after the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas shootings that killed 17 people, and looks to clarify door locking requirements in hopes of preventing the next school shooting. The bill builds on HB 1473, a 2024 law mandating classrooms be locked, as well as campus access doors, gates, and other access points, when students are present. Among the concerns sheriffs raised were the extent to which doors were required to be locked and whether to lock career and technical education classrooms during lessons that require ventilation, like welding. 'I think it's much better now than it was before,' Judd said this week. In July, voicing concerns from his employees, he had said, 'We're having a really hard time' and 'we need something from the state to come down to these folks.' Specifically, the new bill would allow classrooms to use temporary locks, require school safety protocol to apply for 30 minutes before and after school, and allow door locking exemptions for career and technical education classrooms where ventilation is required. 'No two doors or classrooms are equal, depending on the type of instruction that's going on there,' Judd said. The bill requires the perimeter of campuses to be locked or guarded, protecting students behind a locked gate or door. 'The law was a little clunky last year and it needed to be cleaned up so we more clearly could make it reasonable to lock all the doors, and that's what this legislation did this year,' Judd said. 'You would think it would not be necessary to have to put in law to lock a school door to protect a child, however, that's exactly what we had to do.' Sen. Danny Burgess, the measure's Senate sponsor, said the bill helps clarify that schools would not need to provide security for non-school meetings happening at night, such as a Boy Scouts meeting. The 2024 law requires security 'when students are on campus,' whereas the new language sets the timeframe for security measures to 30 minutes before and after school. 'SB 1470 builds on last year's school safety policy that we passed by strengthening school safety training and campus security measures while supporting practical implementation for schools and law enforcement. Essentially, the goal is to balance enhanced safety against the need for efficient operations in schools,' Burgess said when presenting the bill in committee in March. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX The House bill was sponsored by Reps. Brad Yeager and Christine Hunschofsky, who was mayor of Parkland at the time of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas shootings. Hunschofsky said in March that she and Yeager made sure to consult with school leaders in crafting the legislation 'so that whatever we're doing up here also makes sense in a school environment, because it's about safety but it's also about making sure the kids and the teachers have the environment that they need to thrive.' The bill passed unanimously in all of its stops. Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, chair of the safety commission, worked with legislators to address the needed changes, Judd and Burgess said. Subject to the still incomplete Appropriations Act, the bill would implement a centralized panic alert system connecting the state's schools. It would allow childcare facilities, at their own cost, to partake in the school guardian program to train staff or guards in school safety. 'It's like building a new park — you pour sidewalks and then sometimes you see people want to walk in areas where there's not a sidewalk so you go back and you pour more sidewalks where people really want to walk,' Judd said. 'We've got this law in place to make sure children are kept safe and if we need to tweak it or modify it in the future, just as the Legislature was more than willing to do it this time, then we'll do that at the appropriate time.' The bill has not yet been sent to the governor. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

State House committee looks to clarify fine points of school-safety law
State House committee looks to clarify fine points of school-safety law

Yahoo

time11-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

State House committee looks to clarify fine points of school-safety law

Students protest at the Florida Capitol in 2018 following the Parkland school shooting tragedy. (Photo by Julie Hauserman/Florida Phoenix) The Marjory Stoneman Douglas School Safety Commission may see some legislative clarification of a 2024 school safety law that public safety officers have had trouble interpreting. That law, HB 1473, requires classrooms and the perimeter of a campus to be locked while students are present. HB 1403, heard in the House Education Administration Subcommittee Tuesday, would allow for doors to be unlocked if they are actively being watched. The bill, sponsored by Reps. Brad Yeager and Christine Hunschofsky, who was mayor of Parkland at the time of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas school shootings in 2018, would require gates and access points to be closed at least 30 minutes before and after school. Hunschofsky said she and Yeager made sure to consult with school leaders in crafting the legislation 'so that whatever we're doing up here also makes sense in a school environment, because it's about safety but it's also about making sure the kids and the teachers have the environment that they need to thrive.' Cafeterias, auditoriums, and media centers would only be covered by the law when they are being used for instruction or student testing. The bill requires at least one locked barrier between classroom and instructional spaces and school grounds. 'This bill puts school safety first while protecting the student campus experience for the students across Florida,' Yeager said. The proposal addresses concerns Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd raised in July, saying his county feels 'boxed up' by the gray areas he said the law presented. Legislative clarification may be needed on school safety law, commission says The 2024 law requires gate and access points to be locked unless the school has approval from the state. Judd said he supports the purpose of the law, 'but we're having a really hard time.' 'We need something from the state to come down to these folks,' Judd said in July, voicing complaints from his officers. 'Just give me something to explain what all campus access doors means, because I can't physically keep them locked and I don't want to violate the rules, so we need help with some definitions.' The chair of the safety commission, Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, assured Judd at that time that enforcement would not include 'aggressively trying to find the most obscure situation just so they can have a violation.' Gualtieri said then that exceptions may need to be made for welding, diesel engine, and other shop classes. The proposal approved Tuesday does that, carving out an exemption for career and technical education classrooms to open doors for health and safety reasons. The proposal would authorize childcare facilities to participate in the state's school guardian program, which provides state funding to sheriff's offices to train security personnel. Substitute teachers would be required to be informed of school safety procedures before their first day of teaching under the bill. Representatives on the Education Administration Subcommittee approved the measure 16-0. The bill was referred to the Criminal Justice Subcommittee and the Education and Employment Committee. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

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