School safety issues got renewed attention at the St. Paul School District on Tuesday, but tight budgets pose new challenges as officials seek to make schools safer and stem the flow of students to other districts and charter schools.
School board members who on Tuesday heard task force recommendations about how to improve school climate had a fundamental question for administrators: Is this all there is?
Increased support for students in crisis was recommended. The board was urged to consider having more regular classroom teachers join their special-education counterparts in learning techniques to de-escalate disruptive behavior.
But the 2016-17 budget already has been set, and another big deficit looms for 2017-18.
St. Paul is eyeing up to a 5 percent tax-levy increase for schools in 2017, with much of the new proceeds going to building improvements under its new long-range facilities plan.
This summer, a school climate task force that included principals, administrators and others developed recommendations presented Tuesday by Jon Peterson, executive director of the Office of College and Career Readiness, and Kathy Lombardi, the district's mental health coordinator.
In addition to suggesting increased training for general-education teachers, Lombardi said that the task force urged an ongoing look into the restorative-practices approaches to discipline being made possible under a new contract with teachers, as well as creation of a districtwide school climate team that could review ideas that the board could consider funding in future years.
Board Member Zuki Ellis said that the big question for many people is whether students are safe in the schools. She said she believed the task force recommendations came up short in providing answers.