4 - 24b - Media Advisory - P-SAG Parents Safety Advocacy Group
4 - 24b - Media Advisory - P-SAG Parents Safety Advocacy Group
4 - 24b - Media Advisory - P-SAG Parents Safety Advocacy Group
Details: MCM is an ongoing forum for DPS parents and aligned community members to
formalize ‘asks’ of Denver Public Schools (DPS) Superintendent Dr. Alex Marrero and the Board
of Education (BOE).
Speakers: Rev. Fidel Butch Montoya, Executive Director of Latino Faith Initiative and
Former Denver Manager of Safety, Jason McBride, Violence prevention expert and community
activist, April Martinez, APS parent, bridge builder and community activist, Dane Washington
Sr, DPS parent and researcher at CU Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence, Dr.
Darlene Sampson, Ph.D Educational Leadership and Equity Consultant, and Vernon Jones,
DPS parent and Executive Partner of Faithbridge
This last week, April 20th marked the 24th anniversary since the mass shooting at Columbine
High School. We have had 24 years to learn that guns and school violence are ubiquitous. We
have learned that risk assessment, safety policy and practice implementation is a critical
necessity. Yet, this monday, April 24th marks 570 days since the BOE revoked the district’s
original detailed safety policy and replaced it with the empty Executive Limitation (EL) 11 which
directed the Superintendent to “develop and maintain a safe schools plan, following
consultation with school and school district accountability committees, parents,
teachers, administrators, students, and when appropriate, members of the community,
that provides for a safe learning environment conducive to the learning process and free
from unnecessary disruption….”
Over 90,000 children and 14,000 employees in DPS remain in tenuous safety environments
every day. In 570 days, DPS has made no revelation of safety risk examination nor clear targets
for safety assessment.
Instead, PSAG can find only one document suggesting the safety targets the current BOE has
utilized. In “Ends 1.4 Heath and Safety 12/16/22” final accepted draft, Dr.Marrero details his
safety goals. He itemizes “compliance with vaccination rates” and “monitoring of student
vaccinations” (TP 1.4.1 and TP 1.4.2) followed by “reduction in out of school suspensions”
(OSS) but just for “marginalized” groups (TP 1.4.3). We find NO metrics around reduction in
violent conflict, reduction in guns brought to school, reduction in lockdowns, nor reduction in
homicides on school grounds. DPS notes 3,643 in the OSS in which Marrero’s safety metrics
focus. Yet, DPS reports >90,000 students on its website. We wonder, what about safety for
the remaining 86,000+ children of the district? What about the other 96% of DPS not
recognized in Ends 1.4?
1
In an OpEd published in the Denver Gazette,former Denver Manager of Safety Fidel “Butch”
Montoya said, “If key DPS players are too busy with political matters, and continue doing
nothing as the days pass, they are setting the stage for another tragic incident. Since the recent
shootings, nothing has really changed to make our schools safer.
“If I were Superintendent Marrero, the very next day after being ordered to develop a plan, I
would have started assembling a community safety group, and started giving regular,
public updates on process and progress. Ultimately, developing a meaningful safety plan
means more than meeting with ‘experts’ and constituents of DPS. This process calls for an
in-depth review of every school safety practice, all school safety policies, as well as transfer and
student exchange policies between school districts.”
This week instead of prioritizing student and educator safety, Superintendent Marrero entered
the national stage by attending NASA’s Space Symposium. Dr. Marrero did not have time to
attend a scheduled meeting with Denver City Council members.
Yet, our children of DPS do not have time to wait. We cannot ignore what we have learned in
the last 24 years since Columbine and we cannot let our personal politics blind us to the urgent
reality of gun violence and the necessity of evidenced safety practices.
1-We demand immediate objective risk assessment of DPS schools, inclusive of physical
buildings and their surroundings as well as assessment of affective and behavioral risk factors.
We demand this risk assessment be transparent.
2-We demand the development of safety metrics and targets that benefit not just marginalized
students but ALL students. These metrics must include reductions in violent acts and weapon
related threats. We believe that the goals of the district should be to reduce lockdowns and days
lost to violence while promoting academic success and self-actualization for all students by
creating a stable learning environment.
School safety is a nonnegotiable condition necessary for students’ emotional and psychological
health and ability to learn. We recognize there is not enough mental health support for students
who are operating in an education system that is dramatically underfunded during a time when
people, including high-needs students, can easily access highly destructive firearms. Because
of these realities, we have a duty to come together as a village and act thoughtfully to create a
safer school community for our children and educators.
2
P-SAG has continued to work tirelessly to understand root causes and areas of district level
dereliction and misgovernance. PSAG has continued to analyze over 35 hours of BOE work
sessions and board meetings since June 11, 2020, when School Resource Officers (SROs)
were removed by a BOE resolution. P-SAG has also examined existing DPS safety policy audits
and analyzed implementation and monitoring. They have sought help from experts in policy and
safety practice and partnered with others outside the East community. They continue to bridge
silos of communities to learn from and ensure the work is inclusive of the many and diverse
experiences which embody our rich and unique community at East High and all of Denver.
3
10 Create an objective and independent third-party C, in
April managed process for all DPS employees to report process
DPS mismanagement and safety concerns without with DPS
retaliation (e.g. whistleblower hotline) and that the ombuds-
resulting in-school intelligence be transparently men
accessible to the community