School Safety Agents are the frontline in keeping NYC students and the school community safe. They routinely confiscate weapons and keep those who could harm students outside the school doors. They nurture and maintain the safe environment necessary for our kids to learn and thrive. Unfortunately, some are demonizing the very people who have dedicated their lives to protecting kids.

Exposing schools to greater danger is not police reform! Local 237 will strongly oppose any proposals that weaken safety in our schools.

More than any other group of NYPD employees, SSAs truly reflect the communities they serve. They are our mothers, fathers, sisters, grandmothers and neighbors. They earn our thanks every day. We owe it to them and our kids to give SSAs the respect, tools and training they need to do their jobs right.

Fight for Safe Schools!

  • Gregory Floyd on the Arthur Aidala show (970AM)

    On the March 6th broadcast, Floyd and Aidala discuss safety in New York City schools.

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  • Daily News: NYPD assigns more cops to city schools to combat uptick in violence

    Gregory Floyd, the head of Teamsters Local 237, which represents the city’s school safety agents, said his members “have always alerted” local cops to issues at their schools that could lead to a violent incident.

    Floyd blames the increase in violence at dismissal times to the removal of “safe corridor” programs that were run by the NYPD and School Safety officers before the pandemic.

    As part of the program, cops and School Safety officers would monitor streets students used to leave school on their way to the nearest train stations and bus stops.

    “We had the safe corridor program down to a science,” Floyd said Friday. “But during the George Floyd protests, the de Blasio administration weakened it. They should never have allowed the liberals who don’t have children in our schools tell us how to protect children.”

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  • SI Advance: Safety agent who applied tourniquet to Tottenville HS shooting victim details dramatic episode

    STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — School Safety Agent Peter Mattera was at his usual post outside Tottenville High School Tuesday afternoon for dismissal when he heard multiple gunshots in his area.

    He rushed toward the scene, just dozens of feet from the school’s entrance, and put a call over his radio that there were possible shots fired. When the victim, a 14-year-old boy, hit the ground just across the street from him with blood coming from his ankle, he jumped into action.

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  • Local 237 Questions Use of “Violence Interrupters” in Schools

    On behalf of School Safety Agents, President Floyd has asked Mayor Adams for details on the deployment, duties and qualifications of “Violence Interrupters” in NYC public schools.

    Floyd reminded Mayor Adams that School Safety Agent functions already include preventing and calming violent disruptions among students, and that students often turn to them before going to teachers or guidance counselors.

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  • Daily News: Brooklyn school staffer shot in head steps from school, left clinging to life

    A Brooklyn public school paraprofessional was shot in the head Tuesday just a block from campus, leaving him clinging to life, police sources said.

    The 19-year-old teacher’s assistant was leaving the school and heading to a deli at the corner of Avenue M and Utica Ave. in Flatlands when a gunman fired off at least four rounds around 2:50 p.m., according to cops and sources.

    He was shot steps from P.S. 203 Floyd Bennett School, where he works, police said.

    A man who witnessed the chaos said he was “face-to-face” with the shooter.

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  • NY1: School safety agent union president talks importance of violence prevention

    Greg Floyd, president of Local 237, spoke to NY1’s Dean Meminger Sunday evening about school safety and how to prevent violence in public schools.

    “This is not the way to begin the school year,” he said in response to recent shootings near schools.

    A 15-year-old Brooklyn Laboratory Charter School student was killed after being shot in the abdomen blocks from his school, according to police.

    On Friday, sources told NY1 a 17-year-old student was shot not far from Lincoln High School in Brooklyn.

    According to Floyd, there are 2,000 fewer school safety agents than before the pandemic in 2019.

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  • ABC News: Nearly 6,000 weapons seized from NYC schools this year, SSA union says

    NEW YORK CITY (WABC) -- Eyewitness News has learned exclusively that New York City school safety agents have seized 5,931 weapons from students this year, according to the union for the safety agents.

    It's a disturbing trend that has plagued the city's school system since the beginning of the year.

    "When someone finds a weapon in the school, the very next day more weapons are brought because children say, well, they have a weapon I better bring one too," said Gregory Floyd, the head of Local 237.

    Floyd said school safety agents, who are unarmed, are seizing brass knuckles, stun guns, knives and metal pipes from students. It's an issue that has been getting worse at city schools -- and one that Eyewitness News first reported in 2016.

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  • SSA/NYPD Father's Day Events

  • NY Post: Teachers, parents want real discipline as NYC student suspensions fall

    The schools were out of control starting with de Blasio,” said Gregory Floyd, head of Teamsters Local 237, which represents the city’s school safety agents. “He decided to reduce suspensions by not suspending students for infractions they should have been disciplined for. This is part of the reason why we have what we have today.

    “What you see is a result of ignoring the problem…I blame the last City Council, the last Mayor and restorative justice.”

    Principals can levy a one to five day suspension, while superintendents can suspend students for up to a year.

    Pressure from the DOE has prompted administrators to downgrade incidents or sweep them under the rug, educators charge.
    “Those suspension numbers are going down because things aren’t getting reported or they’re getting downgraded,” claimed one anonymous Brooklyn teacher.

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  • NY Post: Another NYC teen threatened to shoot up a Queens school ‘like in Texas’

    A teen was busted for allegedly threatening to shoot up his Queens high school in the wake of the Robb Elementary School massacre in Uvalde, Texas.

    “I’m going to shoot the school. Like in Texas. Be ready,” 18-year-old Forest Hills High School student Diego Sarmiento allegedly scrawled on a desk, according to a criminal complaint filed by Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz.

    It was one in a series of shooting threats to disrupt New York City and Long Island schools over the past week.

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  • Gothamist: Weapons seizures in city schools have skyrocketed since the pandemic began

    Mayor Eric Adams on Wednesday pleaded with parents to become more involved in their children’s lives, by confronting them about their knowledge of potentially criminal behavior.

    He spoke one day after a mass shooting in Texas where an 18-year-old gunman killed at least 19 children and two teachers. His remarks also come as police report a dramatic spike in weapons being recovered from students in city schools.

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  • BACA June Fundraiser

    The Staten Island Chapter of Bikers Against Child Abuse (BACA) chapter, with the help of 237 member David Perez, held a successful event to raise awareness about child abuse.

    School Safety Agent David Perez is a proud member of BACA and goes above and beyond to fight against child abuse. 

     

     

     

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  • Staten Island SSAs Welcome Race Fans!

    The Staten Island Michael J Petrides complex held their annual soap box derby races featuring various schools from all over Staten Island racing their homemade derby cars.

    A BIG thank you to MJP School Safety Agents along with MTF Saturday patrol who ensured everyone's safety and well being. It may have been 90 degrees outside, but everyone had fun!

    Thanks also  to SSS SALEM, SSA 3 CHAMBLISS (MJP L/3), SSA 3 DIGIOIA (MTF L/3) who led this event to ensure it was handled safely and professionally!

    View Photos

  • CBS Radio: School safety union calls for more random weapons checks in NYC schools

    NEW YORK (1010 WINS) -- The President of the school safety union is calling for an increase in random weapons checks — even at elementary schools.

    "We should have at least 10 schools a day randomly checked for weapons. And if you find weapons you go back,” Greg Floyd, the president of Teamsters Local 237 which represents school safety agents in New York City, told WCBS 880’s Kristie Keleshian.  “You go back each and every week until they're no weapons you find in those schools you found weapons. Then you do spot checks every three months."

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  • The Chief: School stabbing renews calls for more safety agents

    The attack highlighted for many parents and educators why more school safety agents were needed in schools. While there were typically about 5,500 agents before the coronavirus pandemic, staffing levels have diminished by about 2,000, according to Teamsters Local 237, which represents the agents.

    The staffing shortages were thanks to attrition and the cancellation of a 475-person class during the spring of 2021 after advocates calling for police-free schools were outraged about the prospective hires.

    Teamsters Local 237 President Greg Floyd said Garcia was the only school safety agent working at the school, which has about 560 students.
    “If it wasn’t for the cuts, he would have had at least one more person there with him,” he said.

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  • NBC: Hero School Safety Agent Describes Risking Life to Save NYC Counselor From Knife Attack

    Parents, administrators and even Mayor Eric Adams called the actions of Hector Garcia heroic, as he intervened to save an educator inside PS 69, Journey Prep School, and thwarted an attack from the suspect.

    But the 55-year-old Garcia's first thought was not about his safety, it was about the students.

    "I call them my children, my kids," he told NBC New York. "I thank God there was no children and little kids around."
    The incident occurred around 7:40 a.m. at the school on Theiriot Avenue, when Garcia heard a "commotion" come over his radio just minutes before children were due to arrive Thursday morning. Garcia went to help, and saw a counselor struggling against a man.

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  • News 4:Safety Agent Slashed While Thwarting ‘Intruder' Attack on NYC Elementary Teacher

    Local advocates and unions say the latest violence underscores the need for more safety agents in public schools citywide

    An intruder who tried to attack a teacher at a public elementary school in the Bronx ended up slashing a "heroic" on-duty school safety agent who intervened and thwarted the attack, Mayor Eric Adams said Thursday. One suspect is in custody.

    The agent was taken to a hospital after being slashed behind the ear at PS 69, Journey Prep School, on Thieriot Avenue around 7:40 a.m. The agent is expected to be OK.

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  • The “People's” Response to the FY2023 Preliminary NYC Budget

    The extremists are once again calling on the NYC Council to  eliminate SSA positions and open our schools to guns, weapons and criminals. 

    According to the group, “the City plans to hire 1000 more school safety agents, prioritizing policing over student learning and wellbeing. Mayor Adams said his budget is “focused on equity, safety, and justice.” But this proposed budget continues the legacy of disinvestment and criminalization of students of color.”

    Local 237 will continue to fight these dangerous proposals. 

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  • Daily News: NYC teens caught with loaded gun in Bronx schoolyard

    Two Bronx teenagers were caught in their schoolyard handling a loaded gun Tuesday afternoon, police said.

    The 16- and 17-year-old students were spotted by school safety agents passing the tan-colored gun back and forth just after noon outside Bronx Mott Hall school in Claremont, school safety sources said.

    Each teen claimed the gun belonged to the other, and both were taken into custody, police said.

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  • CBS: NYC Schools Chancellor David Banks shares his vision for Department of Education

    NEW YORK -- After two months on the job, new Schools Chancellor David Banks is offering harsh criticism of the Department of Education.

    On Wednesday, he laid out a new path for ending bureaucracy, equipping all students with a career path to the middle class, and improving school safety.

    As CBS2's Marcia Kramer reported, the chancellor wants to hire 1,000 new school safety agents to deal with a dramatic increase in weapons brought to class.

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  • Daily News: Plan to transfer NYC school safety agents from the NYPD to the Education Dept. is reversed

    The new budget proposal from Mayor Adams may have put the final nail in the coffin of a long-stalled plan to transfer control of the city’s school safety agents from the NYPD to the Education Department.

    Gregory Floyd, the president of Teamsters Local 237, the union representing school safety agents, who has vehemently opposed the transfer from the start, said “the proposed movement of School Safety Agents from NYPD supervision to the DOE was the mayor’s decision. We think he’s made the right one.”

     

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  • CBS: In wake of shooting of 14-year-old in Brooklyn, calls grow for more security at NYC schools

    NEW YORK -- There are new calls for increased security on school grounds, following the shooting of a teenager outside a high school in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn on Monday afternoon. Police are still searching for a suspect.

    Surveillance video shows a man dressed in dark colors gesture as if talking to someone and then suddenly he pulls out a gun and shoots.

    Police said the bullet shattered a bus shelter and then hit the ankle of a 14-year-old boy who walking outside of Boys and Girls High School.

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  • School Safety Autism Event April 16th

  • The Chief: School weapons seizures soar 80%. Mayor rethinks cuts in safety agents

    The increase in weapons confiscated in city public schools has risen dramatically, with 3,315 knives, stun guns and other arsenal seized from July 2021 and Feb. 20. Teamsters Local 237 President Greg Floyd believed some students were bringing weapons to school to protect themselves and pushed back against a proposal to cut 560 School Safety Agents.

    Following the NYPD’s release of data showing that the number of weapons confiscated in schools jumped 80 percent compared to pre-pandemic levels, Mayor Adams said he was open to reconsidering a move that would permanently cut 560 School Safety Agent positions from the budget.

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  • Chief Leader: Mayor to Slash 560 School Safety Posts; Union Questions Logic

    A Police Department spokesperson stated that if enacted, the cuts would "realign the budget more closely with actual headcount levels." The reduction would save the city $22 million per year.

    But Teamsters Local 237, which represents the Agents, questioned the decision to scale back staffing as city public schools experienced an increase in weapons seizures. Eight guns were confiscated in schools between July 1 and Oct. 24, compared to just one gun seized during that same period in 2019—the last full school year before the pandemic.

    “Crime up. Violence up. Guns up. So what does the public-safety Mayor do? Cut School Safety Agents? Is he kidding?” said Hank Sheinkopf, a spokesman for the union.

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  • FOX 5: NYPD school safety agents could be reduced under budget plan

    NEW YORK - Right now, more than 1,000 positions as New York City school safety agents remain unfilled. And the mayor doesn't want to fill most of those vacancies.

    "Mayor Adams is putting our children's lives at risk, and we are not okay with that," parent Mona Davids said, reacting to plans to slash the number of school safety agents.

    Under a preliminary budget introduced by Mayor Eric Adams this week, the number of school safety agents would be permanently reduced by the hundreds. Current agents wouldn't lose their jobs but there would be a big reduction in new hires.

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  • Daily News: Mayor Adams slashes 560 School Safety Agent positions in budget proposal

    New York City’s force of school safety agents, which currently has more than 1,000 unfilled positions, would be permanently reduced by 560 under a preliminary budget introduced by Mayor Adams Wednesday.

    The city’s force of school safety officers — the largest such division in the country — employed more than 5,000 agents as of June 2020, but saw its numbers shrink to fewer than 4,000 by November 2021 because of high attrition and a hiring slowdown, according to a recent report by the state comptroller.

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  • Reaching Out with Gregory Floyd: Special Guest Mona Davids

    In his February 12, 2022 broadcast. Local 237 President Gregory Floyd spoke with Mona Davids, president of the NYC Parents Union and a founding member of the NYC School Safety Coalition.

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  • NY Post: Manhattan school plagued with violence, parents say concerns neglected

    Violence has spiraled at a Manhattan middle school in one of the city’s top districts this year — and administrators aren’t doing enough to stop it, a group of parents told the Post.

    A string of incidents at 75 Morton, including a bus stop beating and a cafeteria body slam, drew a rare visit from Department of Education security chief Mark Rampersant on Friday, sources said.

    Some parents assert that principal Valerie Leak — who is in her first year at the helm — has neglected violent incidents and relied largely on restorative justice strategies to maintain order.

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  • CBS: NYC Parents Sound Alarm Over School Safety Issues, Say Their Concerns Are Being Ignored

    Some parents in Chelsea say the lack of safety in their schools is out of control.

    They claim even principals have asked the city for more school safety agents, but they told CBS2’s Lisa Rozner on Thursday their requests have been falling on deaf ears.

    The NYPD says it’s training a new class of safety agents, but the safety agents union says it’s a class of almost 200, a fraction of the void.

    “It takes about five months to get a school safety agent in place. So, if we started today, by September we can have school safety agents in place,” union president Gregory Floyd said.

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  • The Chief: New Chancellor Brushes Off Push To Rid Schools of Safety Agents

    The incoming Schools Chancellor Dec. 13 defended School Safety Agents and proposed modernizing school security by installing invisible metal detectors in response to the alarming rise in weapons being discovered in school buildings.
    David Banks also was critical of the push to remove Safety Agents from the schools, which hard-liners have said was necessary rather than following the current plan to shift jurisdiction over them from the Police Department to the Department of Education.

    'Invaluable to Schools'

    “I was a School Safety Agent when I started my career…I worked at Clara Barton High School in Brooklyn,” he told PIX 11. “If you speak to most school Teachers and Principals, they will tell you that school safety officers are invaluable and they’re every bit as much a part of the culture of our schools as the Teachers are.”
    He said he “rejected” the idea from those demanding police-free schools that the Safety Agents, who are unarmed, were the equivalent of cops.

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  • SI Advance: ‘My student had a gun to his head...That’s traumatizing,’ says Wagner H.S. teacher at online school safety town hall

    STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — A teacher at Susan E. Wagner High School said students there are “afraid,” after a spate of violent incidents -- the most recent being a fight outside the school that involved a gun.

    The teacher, who spoke at an online town hall meeting Wednesday, said her student was the boy in the Dec. 6 video whose attacker put a gun in his face after getting the upper hand in the fight. On video another attacker continues pummeling his victim after he appears to go limp on the ground.

    She said the school didn’t inform her about the incident until the next day, and the boy who had the gun in his face didn’t return to class for a week.

    Watch the Town Hall on Facebook

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  • SI Advance: At Susan Wagner HS town hall, parents voice concern, while officials detail safety measures

    By Joseph Ostapiuk | jostapiuk@siadvance.com

    STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Susan Wagner High School officials and the commanding officer of the NYPD’s 122nd Precinct held a town hall Monday evening to inform families on a litany of safety measures that have been implemented in the wake of numerous high-profile incidents that have taken place in the vicinity of the campus in recent weeks.

    (Subscriber content)

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  • DEA: Violent Criminals Back on the Street

    New video from Detectives's Endowment Association.  Albany Bail Reform  politicians have created irresponsible laws backed by many NYC Council members that allow violent criminals back on the street immediately after arrest to victimize the public again & again. These laws need to be fixed. 

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  • CBS News: Gun-Related Incidents At And Near Susan E. Wagner High School Prompt Union Leader To Demand NYC Hire More Safety Agents

    NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — A rise in violence has students and parents on Staten Island concerned. There have been at least two incidents involving guns, two days in a row at the same school.

    Police responded both times to Susan E. Wagner High School in the Willowbrook section of the borough.

    On Wednesday, CBS2’s Leah Mishkin spoke to students about the violence.

    “It’s just scary, like you hear of other shootings around the country,” senior Julianna Raimonda said.
    Exit doors were secured and students had to stay inside the building Monday afternoon after a 16-year-old and a 19-year-old reported being assaulted near the track/football field.

    Police said one of the victims was struck with a gun across the face. He was taken to the hospital in stable condition. No arrests have been made in the ongoing investigation.

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  • FOX 5: Violence at and near Staten Island school alarms parents and students

    NEW YORK - Parents are outraged after a number of fights at Susan Wagner High School on Staten Island.

    On Monday afternoon, two teens — a 16-year-old and a 19-year-old — were attacked, police said. They were punched repeatedly. At one point, one of the attackers pointed a gun at one of the boys. Police said the 16-year-old told them he was pistol-whipped.

    Gregory Floyd, the president of Local 237, which represents school safety agents, said the number of school safety agents has gone from about 5,000 in 2019 to about 1,800 now.

    "I am afraid that somebody's going to get killed," he said.

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  • PIX11: NYC students found with guns, knives, stun guns, pepper spray and more at schools

    So far this year, New York City schools have seen a dramatic increase in weapons seizure when compared to 2019.

    From July through November, 10 firearms were recovered at NYC schools compared to just one in that period in 2019.

    “Weapons have absolutely no place in our schools, and our outstanding school safety agents work every day to stop dangerous items from entering our school and keep our schools safe,” a Department of Education spokesperson said. “We worked in partnership with the NYPD to increase scanning in priority communities and the increase in recovered is a result of this vigilant work keeping dangerous items out of our schools.”

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  • Impromptu metal detector finds kids with 21 weapons at Brooklyn school day after student gun bust

    City officials placed a single metal detector in a Brooklyn school building the day after a student was busted with a loaded gun — and turned up 21 weapons in just one day, law-enforcement sources said.

    The Department of Education installed the scanner in the complex housing the Urban Assembly School for Law and Justice and two other schools in Downtown Brooklyn Thursday morning after the 17-year-old was nabbed there allegedly with a 9mm pistol and more than $30,000 in cash.

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  • NY1: Union boss blames progressive NYC officials for school safety agent staffing shortage

    NEW YORK — Mayor Bill de Blasio announced on Monday that the city will increase its use of metal detectors to scan students for weapons. His decision followed the discovery of five guns at different city schools in less than a week, and after the release of a viral video of a fight at a Staten Island school on Friday.

    But Adams stopped short of fully endorsing de Blasio's plan, saying he would work with local community groups, parents and students to find a new solution.

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  • CBS2 Cameras On Hand At Unannounced Security Screenings At Troubled New York City High Schools

    NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — An epidemic of violence and an arsenal of guns, knives and other weapons in city schools has finally prompted Mayor Bill de Blasio to take action.

    CBS2 cameras were exclusively on hand at one school Monday, where a cache of weapons was confiscated, Marcia Kramer reported.

    The head of the school safety union is calling the mayor’s new plan “Back to the Future,” because it involves redeploying cops who, before the whole “defund the police” movement, were an integral party of reducing school violence and keeping kids safe.

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  • AM NY: Sheinkopf Speaks - The Ballad of Million Dollar Jumaane

    We now have the case of Million Dollar Jumaane. With no real opponent in the Democratic primary for the not ever fully justified city-wide office he holds, Jumaane grabbed close to $1 million bucks from the City treasury through our very expansive campaign public finance program. Like Plunkitt, our public advocate shows up. He talks. He says he introduces laws. He publishes his own annual worst landlords list. 

    Civil servants? New York City school safety agents are working-class people, blue-collar, mostly women of color. They support families on their salaries. Million Dollar Jumaane called those minority women criminals, child abusers. School safety agents collect knives and weapons and prevent city school violence. Million Dollar Jumaane says fire them.

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  • CBS News:String Of Violence On NYC School Campuses, Dramatic Drop In Safety Officers Has Parents Concerned

    There has been a dramatic drop in safety officers in New York City schools, and since in-person learning resumed this fall, we’ve seen a string of violence on campuses.

    It has parents worried about the safety of their kids.

    As CBS2 political reporter Marcia Kramer reports, the head of the school safety union is saying “I told you so,” claiming that city officials didn’t listen when he said the “defund the police” movement and a lack of funds to hire more agents would leave schools vulnerable and students unprotected.

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  • News 12 Bronx: Calls for school safety concerns increase as violence in schools skyrocket

    In the wake of increased violence in schools throughout the city, parents are expressing concerns about student safety in the classroom due to the lack of school safety agents in school buildings.

    Images of a blood-stained sidewalk from a recent slashing outside Truman High School clings to parents as concerns grow regarding the acts of violence that have already taken place three weeks into the school year.

    "This is a crisis. The ongoing violence that's happening in our schools and around our schools is out of control," said Mona Davids, president of the NYC Parents Union.
    Davids says she fears the incidents of school violence will increase if the number of school safety agents continues to dwindle. 

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  • Oct. 10 Rally For School Safety Agents!

    Join our Rally to Keep School Safety Agents In Schools and under the NYPD at City Hall Park, on Broadway between Warren and Murray Street.

    Since schools fully reopened, violent incidents including slashings, stabbings, and shootings in and around schools have surged. Weapon and drug confiscations have increased. Join us in support of School Safety Agents and demand a plan to improve school safety and protect all students.

    Read More
  • NY1: 25% of school safety agents in NYC still aren't vaccinated

    Floyd says he encourages his members to speak to their physicians, and says that in almost all cases their physicians will advise them to get vaccinated.

    But he says the staffing crunch is made worse by elected officials who want to remove the NYPD from schools, and who called for the city not to hire new classes of agents.

    “I warned everyone — parents, students, teachers — my conversation started last year and continued up to this year,” Floyd said. “Well, September's here and you’re short.”

    Read More
  • NY Post: Eric Adams says he’ll block school safety duties shifting from NYPD to DOE control

    Democratic mayoral nominee Eric Adams told an advocacy group this month that he would halt a de Blasio administration plan to transfer school safety duties from the NYPD to the Department of Education, The Post has learned.

    Read More
  • Video: Gun Violence in NYC is Out of Control

    FIX the bail reform laws!

    The laws passed by NY politicians are not working — and the violence across the city is the result. Too many lives have already been lost or forever tragically altered. Elected officials must change their failed policies. It’s a matter of life and death.

    Read More
  • News 12: Parents, students call for school safety agents to remain under NYPD jurisdiction

    Parents and activists are pleading for school safety agents to stay in public schools and be kept under the jurisdiction of the NYPD, and not the Department of Education.

    They are concerned with rising crime and gang violence in schools as recent calls have come to defund the police and remove the uniformed school safety agents.

    Students spoke out to recall instances of bullying and violence they faced from their peers.

    Mona Davids, of the New York City School Safety Coalition, says there were school safety agents there for her when she was hurt.

    Read More
  • NY Post: Critics blast Maya Wiley’s ‘trauma-informed care’ plan to shift $1B from NYPD

    Does that “word salad” come with window dressing?

    Democratic mayoral candidate Maya Wiley’s plan to take $1 billion from the NYPD to provide what she calls “trauma-informed care” in city public schools won’t solve the surging crime problem — and may even make the halls of education more dangerous, critics say.

    “Terminology like ‘trauma-informed’ — whatever that is — is not going to save a child’s life. Terminology is not going to keep children safe,” said Greg Floyd, head of the union that represents school safety agents.

    Read More
  • Daily News: ‘I can’t reach out and touch my child anymore,’ mom grieves for teen son shot dead outside Brooklyn charter school

    Watts has harsh words for Urban Dove. 

    “There was no safety there. There were no cops, no security guards. There was nothing there to protect my son. He didn’t feel safe there,” she said.

    Read More
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