Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CEOs work!
? they could've just called the regular police, too. The CEO was not on campus. The school had to call them.
Thankfully, nothing serious happened, but if it had, then there would've been no CEO on campus to address the issue. Admin has to call them.
What if the SRO wasn’t there? Because they never had backup, missed school for leave/sick days/ court and were often not on campus.
Luckily the CEO program has multiple cops assigned to each school and can respond quickly.
When the SRO got the gun from a Clarksburg student a few years back the admin had to call them
Exactly. The people who complain the loudest about SROs being gone have no idea what the reality of the program was. The SRO from Sherwood had a DUI but was assigned to the school to do drug and alcohol education. Plus put a girl in a headlock. Some of the SROs were great. But the program never meant that there was a cop at each high school 100% of the time.
Why throw out a program just because of a few bad applies.
Explain why PGHS, with a higher % of black kids than MCPS, still has SROs if you think they are not useful?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CEOs work!
? they could've just called the regular police, too. The CEO was not on campus. The school had to call them.
Thankfully, nothing serious happened, but if it had, then there would've been no CEO on campus to address the issue. Admin has to call them.
What if the SRO wasn’t there? Because they never had backup, missed school for leave/sick days/ court and were often not on campus.
Luckily the CEO program has multiple cops assigned to each school and can respond quickly.
When the SRO got the gun from a Clarksburg student a few years back the admin had to call them
Exactly. The people who complain the loudest about SROs being gone have no idea what the reality of the program was. The SRO from Sherwood had a DUI but was assigned to the school to do drug and alcohol education. Plus put a girl in a headlock. Some of the SROs were great. But the program never meant that there was a cop at each high school 100% of the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CEOs work!
? they could've just called the regular police, too. The CEO was not on campus. The school had to call them.
Thankfully, nothing serious happened, but if it had, then there would've been no CEO on campus to address the issue. Admin has to call them.
What if the SRO wasn’t there? Because they never had backup, missed school for leave/sick days/ court and were often not on campus.
Luckily the CEO program has multiple cops assigned to each school and can respond quickly.
When the SRO got the gun from a Clarksburg student a few years back the admin had to call them
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CEOs work!
? they could've just called the regular police, too. The CEO was not on campus. The school had to call them.
Thankfully, nothing serious happened, but if it had, then there would've been no CEO on campus to address the issue. Admin has to call them.
What if the SRO wasn’t there? Because they never had backup, missed school for leave/sick days/ court and were often not on campus.
Luckily the CEO program has multiple cops assigned to each school and can respond quickly.
When the SRO got the gun from a Clarksburg student a few years back the admin had to call them
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CEOs work!
See something, say something works too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CEOs work!
? they could've just called the regular police, too. The CEO was not on campus. The school had to call them.
Thankfully, nothing serious happened, but if it had, then there would've been no CEO on campus to address the issue. Admin has to call them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CEOs work!
See something, say something works too.
Anonymous wrote:CEOs work!
Anonymous wrote:CEOs work!
Anonymous wrote:But all this hand wringing of safety issues is overblown, per MCPS apologist.
Good god.