Garfield Parents and Safety at Garfield High School

This story from KUOW:

Garfield High School parents want Seattle leaders to do more to protect students after a 17-year-old was shot in the leg nearby the school last week.

Parents and community members want city leaders and Seattle Public Schools to take stronger action to protect students and the larger Central District community. They told KUOW they feel like they have to do something to make it clear that something must be done about escalating violence they are witnessing.

“It should not be a privilege to have safety. [It] should be offered to all students," said another Garfield parent, whose name we're not disclosing to protect their child's privacy.

According to a Seattle Police Department statement, the shooting on March 13 was not connected to a homicide that happened later in the day near 24th Avenue South and South Main Street. Investigators are still looking for a suspect. The student who was shot in the leg was not the intended target, according to police.

Who was there?

Newly elected Seattle City Councilmember Tanya Woo attended the East Precinct Advisory Council meeting Monday night, where many Garfield High parents showed up to voice their concerns and talk about solutions.

Woo shared some of the solutions parents brought up during the meeting ahead of the “protect and protest” event Wednesday, including the use of firearm trigger locks, looking at Seattle’s Youth Violence Prevention Initiative, and how best to use cameras and police officers outside school. Woo said parents also suggested looking at bus schedules to make sure kids are getting on their buses and leaving the area after school.

I appreciate that CM Woo showed up but those are tired solutions that have no immediacy (except for the buses - the district could assign personnel to the buses, making sure students get on quickly).  

The district website reflected that there might be Board members there but I suspect not if KUOW didn't report that.

What next?

Some parents have organized a “protect and protest'' event Wednesday, exactly one week after the student was shot. Organizers invited the community to protest at each corner of 23rd Avenue at 2:10 p.m., before school ends, to help them bring awareness to the ongoing gun violence in the area.

In a statement, the Seattle Police Department said they’ll continue with an enhanced presence around Garfield High to ensure safety for everyone.

Comments

Unknown said…
The irony here is rich. What does Seattle's preeminent social justice academy propose we do? More cops? And who will police gun sales to ensure they're done legally? Or if we outlaw guns, who enforces that?

They helped make this bed. They can sleep in it.

SP
Anonymous said…
Director Sarju attended, and didn't speak until someone asked whether SPS might return to having police officers in schools (as a regular presence — aka "school resource officers"). Sarju said the Board has no say in such decisions. (Apparently she wasn't aware that the Board Policy since 2020 has prohibited this type of police presence in Seattle public schools. https://www.seattleschools.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/4311.pdf)
— Meeting Attendee

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