Arkansas Administrative Code
Agency 005 - DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Division 28 - Division of Elementary and Secondary Education
Rule 005.28.23-003 - Division of Elementary and Secondary Education Rules Governing School Safety
Universal Citation: AR Admin Rules 005.28.23-003
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
1.00 REGULATORY AUTHORITY
1.01 The
State Board of Education enacts these rules pursuant to its authority as set
forth in Ark. Code §§
6-10-121,
6-10-128,
6-11-105,
6-15-1302,
6-15-1303,
6-17-113, and
25-15-201 et
seq.
2.00 DEFINITIONS
2.01 "Arkansas
Center for School Safety" means the state school-safety clearinghouse
administered by the Criminal Justice Institute (CJI) of the University of
Arkansas System, through a partnership between CJI and the Arkansas Department
of Education, Division of Elementary and Secondary Education (Division), and
provides education, training, resources, and technical assistance to Arkansas
educators and law enforcement professionals to assist them in meeting the
school-safety needs of students in Arkansas public schools and providing them
with a safe school environment.
2.02. "Division" means the Division of
Elementary and Secondary Education.
2.03 "Institutional Law Enforcement Officer"
also means institutional police department.
2.04 "Public school district" means:
2.04.1 A geographic area that qualifies as a
taxing unit for purposes of ad valorem property taxes under Ark. Code §
26-1-101 et seq. and Arkansas
Constitution, Article 14, § 3, and is either:
2.04.1.1 Governed by an elected board of
directors; or
2.04.1.2 Under the
administrative control of the State Board of Education or the Commissioner of
Education in place of an elected board of directors; or
2.04.2 An open-enrollment public charter
school, as defined in Ark. Code §
6-23-103.
2.05 "School Resource Officer" means:
2.05.1 A sworn law enforcement officer
assigned to a public school whose primary duties are not solely supervisory;
and
2.05.2 An institutional law
enforcement officer as described in Ark. Code §
6-13-1701 et
seq.
2.06
"Superintendent" means:
2.06.1 A person
responsible for oversight of all operations of;
2.06.1.1 A public school district as defined
in these rules; or
2.06.1.2 Other
educational entity.
3.00 SCHOOL SAFETY ASSESSMENT, EMERGENCY RESPONSE DRILLS, AND FLOOR PLANS
3.01 A public school district shall conduct a
comprehensive school safety assessment at least once every three (3) years to
assess the safety, security, accessibility, and emergency preparedness of
district buildings and grounds in collaboration with local law enforcement,
fire, and emergency management officials.
3.01.1 A comprehensive school safety
assessment shall be completed by more than one (1) individual, at least one of
whom is not assigned to the facility be assessed.
3.01.2 A comprehensive school safety
assessment shall include without limitation an assessment of the following:
3.01.2.1 Safety and security of the site and
exterior of buildings;
3.01.2.2
Access control;
3.01.2.3 Safety and
security of the interior of buildings;
3.01.2.4 Monitoring and surveillance,
including without limitation type and extent;
3.01.2.5 Communication and information
security;
3.01.2.6 Review of
emergency operation plans; and
3.01.2.7 School climate and
culture.
3.01.3 The
initial comprehensive school safety assessment shall be conducted by August 1,
2024.
3.01.4 The superintendent
shall submit written verification through the annual statement of assurance, as
required by the Division, that the assessment has been completed and conducted
in collaboration with local law enforcement, medical professionals, fire
department, and emergency management officials.
3.01.5 The comprehensive school safety
assessment shall be solely for the purpose of ensuring student
safety.
3.01.6 Records reflecting
the comprehensive school safety assessment shall not be a public record and
shall not be available for public inspection under the Freedom of Information
Act of 1967, §
25-19-101
et
seq.
3.01.7 A public
school district board of directors or governing body shall only conduct or
discuss the results of the comprehensive school safety assessment in an
executive session.
3.02
At least annually by October 15, a public school district shall conduct a
lockdown drill for a possible threat on campus at each school in the public
school district.
3.02.1 As part of the public
school district's planning for lockdown drills, the public school district
shall:
3.02.1.1 Assess the plan and ability
of the public school district to prevent and respond to a threat on
campus;
3.02.1.2 Identify the roles
and responsibilities of each individual when an emergency occurs;
3.02.1.3 Discuss the logistics of responding
to an emergency on the school campus;
3.02.1.4 Identify areas in which the
emergency operation plan of the school may require modification, if necessary;
and
3.02.1.5 Collaborate with local
law enforcement, medical professionals, fire department, and emergency
management officials.
3.03 All public schools shall conduct tornado
safety drills at least three (3) times per year.
3.03.1 The first tornado safety drill of each
school year must be conducted by October 15.
3.03.2 For purposes of section 3.03 "public
schools" include the Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences, and the Arts,
the Arkansas School for the Deaf, the Arkansas School for the Blind, and
juvenile detention centers.
3.04 Annually, by October 15, public schools
located in areas susceptible to earthquakes shall conduct earthquake safety
drills.
3.04.1 For purposes of section 3.04
"public schools" include the Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences, and the
Arts, the Arkansas School for the Deaf, the Arkansas School for the Blind, and
juvenile detention centers.
3.05 All public schools, private schools, and
educational institutions shall conduct at least one fire drill each month
during the school year.
3.06
Emergency response drills may be conducted during the instructional day or
during noninstructional time periods as determined by the school
district.
3.07 The superintendent,
or designee, shall submit data required by the Division during the appropriate
cycle to verify that drills were completed and submit written verification, as
required by the Division, that collaboration with local law enforcement and
emergency management officials occurred when required.
3.08 A public school district shall provide
current floor plans and pertinent emergency contact information to appropriate
first responders for each school in the district.
3.08.1 Public school district administration
shall provide updated information annually and when substantial building
modifications or changes are made.
3.08.2 The superintendent shall submit
written verification, as required by the Division, that the floor plans and
information were provided to appropriate first responders.
3.09 Information provided under this section
is not a public record and is not available for public inspection under the
Freedom of Information Act of 1967, §
25-19-101
et
seq.
4.00 SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICERS
4.01 A
school district board of directors, or entity authorized to act on behalf of an
open-enrollment public charter school, that accepts a school resource officer
shall either enter into a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the local law
enforcement agency with jurisdiction or adopt policies and procedures if the
school district has an institutional police department, that governs the school
resource officer.
4.01.1 The MOU shall be
based on the model MOU created by the Division and the Arkansas Center for
School Safety, and include without limitation:
4.01.1.1 The financial responsibilities of
each party;
4.01.1.2 The chain of
command;
4.01.1.3 The process for
the selection of school resource officers;
4.01.1.4 The process for the evaluation of
school resource officers;
4.01.1.5
The training requirements for school resource officers; and
4.01.1.6 The roles and responsibilities of
school resource officers, including without limitation:
4.01.1.6.a Clarification of the school
resource officer's involvement in student discipline;
4.01.1.6.b The use of physical restraints or
chemical sprays;
4.01.1.6.c The use
of firearms on the public school campus or at school-sponsored events;
and
4.01.1.6.d Making arrests on
the public school campus or at school-sponsored events.
4.01.2 The superintendent shall
submit written verification, as required by the Division, specifying the
adoption of an MOU or policies and procedures as they pertain to school
resource officers.
4.02 A
school resource officer assigned to a public school or open-enrollment public
charter school campus during the instructional day or employed by a public
school district shall complete:
4.02.1 A
forty-hour basic school resource officer training program developed and
provided, or approved, by the Arkansas Center for School Safety, within
eighteen (18) months of being assigned or employed by the public school
district;
4.02.2 A training in
youth mental health as required by the State Board of Education, within
eighteen (18) months of being assigned or employed by the public school
district, and once every four (4) years thereafter;
4.02.3 A sixteen-hour school resource officer
refresher training developed and provided, or approved, by the Arkansas Center
for School Safety, within five (5) years of receiving the initial basic school
resource officer training described in 4.02.1, and once every five (5) years
thereafter; and
4.02.4 Twelve (12)
hours of public school-specific continuing education developed and provided, or
approved, by the Arkansas Center for School Safety, annually.
4.03 The forty-hour basic school
resource officer training required by 4.02.1 shall address, without limitation,
the roles and responsibilities of school resource officers in public schools,
laws that are specific to public schools and students in public schools, and
adolescent behavior and development.
4.04 The youth mental health training
required by 4.02.2 and the school resource officer refresher training required
by 4.02.3 shall count towards the twelve (12) hours of public school-specific
continuing education required by 4.02.4 for the years during which those
trainings are completed.
4.05 A
school resource officer who is assigned by a public school district for only
extracurricular activities is exempt from these training
requirements.
4.06 A public school
district superintendent and public school principal who accept a school
resource officer shall complete a one-hour training developed and provided, or
approved, by the Arkansas Center for School Safety, within nine (9) months of
accepting or employing the school resource officer.
4.07 Public school district personnel
directly responsible for supervising a school resource officer shall complete a
one-hour school resource officer roles and responsibilities training developed
and provided, or approved, by the Arkansas Center for School Safety, within one
(1) year of accepting or employing the school resource officer and every two
(2) years thereafter.
4.08 Training
provided or approved by the Arkansas Center for School Safety and received by a
licensed educator under 4.03 and 4.04 may count toward the professional
development required for renewal of an educator's license by the Division's
Rules Governing Professional Development.
4.09 The Arkansas Center for School Safety
shall monitor compliance with the continuing education and training
requirements required by law and these rules.
4.09.1 A public school district that enters
into an agreement with a law enforcement agency for a school resource officer
shall comply with requests for information from the Arkansas Center for School
Safety or the Division for purposes of ensuring compliance with applicable law
or rules.
4.09.2 A school resource
officer who fails to complete any training required under this section shall be
unable to serve as a school resource officer until the training required is
complete.
4.09.3 A school resource
officer shall not be assigned to a public school district in which the
superintendent, principal, or supervising personnel, have not completed the
training required.
4.10
Each public school district shall provide to school resource officers,
commissioned school security officers, and institutional law enforcement
officers regular specialized training, including specific training on roles and
responsibilities associated with each position.
4.10.1 Responsibilities of school resource
officers, commissioned school security officers, and institutional law
enforcement officers shall not include involvement with student disciplinary
action, as defined in §
6-18-501 et
seq.
5.00 SCHOOL SAFETY EXPERT
5.01 A
public school district shall have a school safety expert review and advise on
architectural plans for a public school facility before the new construction of
the public school facility.
5.02
The requirements for a school safety expert shall be established by the
Commission for Arkansas Public School Academic Facilities and Transportation by
rule.
6.00 STUDENT MENTAL HEALTH
6.01 Each public school
district shall support student mental health on a timeline to be established by
the Division by:
6.01.1 Supporting access to
training in youth mental health for all school personnel, including
contractors, who regularly interact with students;
6.01.2 Requiring all school staff, including
contracted service providers that regularly interact with students, to complete
mental health awareness training; and
6.01.3 Establishing a behavioral threat
assessment team, which shall:
6.01.3.1 Follow
best practices for team composition and process; and
6.01.3.2 Require that all team members
receive basic and advanced behavioral threat assessment training through the
Arkansas Center for School Safety of the Criminal Justice Institute, or another
organization or entity approved by the State Board of Education.
7.00 PROMOTION OF STUDENT SAFETY AND SECURITY
7.01 Each public school district shall work
with local law enforcement to improve school safety and security by:
7.01.1 Developing plans to increase the
presence of uniformed law enforcement on all public school campuses at all
times when school staff and children are attending class or during a major
extracurricular activity;
7.01.2
Implementing and expanding strategies to promote reporting, which shall include
anonymous reporting of:
7.01.2.1 Suspicious
activity and behavior; and
7.01.2.2
Threats;
7.01.3 Forming
district safety and security teams to review district emergency operations
plans and security policies and procedures;
7.01.4 Training school nurses and staff in
efforts that enhance the emergency medical response within public schools,
including without limitation:
7.01.4.1
Training concerning opioid overdose; and
7.01.4.2 Bleeding control training;
7.01.5 Establishing and
maintaining a comprehensive, common communication plan to be utilized by:
7.01.5.1 School officials.
7.01.5.2 Students; and
7.01.5.3 Parents, legal guardians, or persons
standing in loco parentis to a student;
7.01.5.4 Law enforcement; and
7.01.5.5 Other relevant
stakeholders;
7.01.6
Establishing systems that enable direct communication with local law
enforcement, which may include without limitation:
7.01.6.1 Emergency alert systems;
7.01.6.2 Radios for school officials that are
programmed with law enforcement frequencies; and
7.01.6.3 School camera systems that can be
accessed in real time by law enforcement;
7.01.7 Reviewing and updating cybersecurity
policies and procedures annually; and
7.01.8 Closing and locking all exterior doors
during school hours except for transition times.
7.01.8.1 At no time may a person be impeded
from building egress in compliance with the Arkansas Fire Prevention Code and
the standards for accessible design under the Americans with Disabilities Act,
42 U.S.C. §
12101 et seq., as it existed on January 1.
2023.
8.00 DUTY TO REPORT
8.01 Whenever the principal or other person
in charge of a public school has personal knowledge or has received information
leading to a reasonable belief that any person has committed or has threatened
to commit an act of violence or any crime involving a deadly weapon on school
property or while under school supervision, the principal or person in charge
shall immediately report the incident or threat to the superintendent of the
school district and the appropriate local law enforcement agency.
8.01.1 As used in this section:
8.01.1.1 "Act of violence" means any
violation of Arkansas law where a person purposely or knowingly causes or
threatens to cause death or serious physical injury to another person;
and
8.01.1.2 "Deadly weapon" means:
8.01.1.2.a A firearm or anything manifestly
designed, made, or adapted for the purpose of inflecting death or serious
physical injury; or
8.01.1.2.b
Anything that in the manner of its use or intended use is capable of causing
death or serious physical injury.
8.01.2 The report shall be by telephone or in
person immediately after the incident or threat and shall be followed by a
written report within three (3) business days.
8.01.3 The principal shall notify any school
employee or other person who initially reported the incident that a report has
been made to the appropriate law enforcement agency.
8.01.4 The superintendent, or his or her
designee, shall notify the local school district board of directors of any
report made to law enforcement pursuant to these rules.
8.02 Upon receipt of a report from the
prosecuting attorney, required to be provided within thirty (30) calendar days
after receipt of the file, the principal shall notify any school employee or
any other person who initially reported the incident that a report has been
received from the prosecuting attorney.
8.03 Any person who purposely fails to make a
report as required by Ark. Code §
6-17-113 and these rules shall be
guilty of a Class C misdemeanor.
8.03.1
Purposely failing to report a violent act requires proof that:
8.03.1.1 The person had personal knowledge
that an act of violence or any crime involving a deadly weapon has been
committed or threatened;
8.03.1.2 A
reasonable person would have reported the act or threat; and
8.03.1.3 The person who failed to report had
a conscious object to disregard his obligation to report.
9.00 SCHOOL SAFETY FUNDS
9.01 It is the intent of the
General Assembly that funds set aside for school safety grants be disbursed by
the Division to public school districts, open-enrollment charter schools, and
other educational entities, to aid in implementing the recommendations of the
Governor's School Safety Commission as set forth in the 2018 and 2022 Final
Reports and providing a safe school environment for students and
staff.
9.02 Any funds allocated by
the General Assembly for school safety grants or otherwise provided through a
grant to a public school district, open-enrollment charter school, or
educational entity, by the Division, for the purpose of school safety, shall be
disbursed pursuant to the process and eligibility requirements established by
the Division and in accordance with applicable state and federal laws and
rules.
9.03 The process for
disbursement and eligibility requirements established shall adhere to the
following:
9.03.1 Funding should be made
available to each public school district, open-enrollment charter school, and
private school with at least fifty (50) students.
9.03.2 The amount of funding available to
each public school district, open-enrollment charter school, and private
school, shall be based, at least in part, on student enrollment, taking into
consideration the varying sizes of districts and schools.
9.03.3 All funds shall be provided on a
reimbursement basis for eligible expenses incurred during the fiscal year in
which the funds are made available.
9.03.4 Eligible expenses shall include the
purchase of materials, equipment, or services, to meet the recommendations of
the Governor's School Safety Commission or enhance existing safety measures
that meet the recommendations of the Commission.
9.03.4.1 The Division shall prioritize, by
category, level, or similarity, all recommendations of the Commission that
should be completed by a public school district, open-enrollment charter
school, or educational entity.
9.03.4.2 Expenses for a safety measure not
included in the recommendations of the Commission, shall only be eligible for
reimbursement upon approval from the Commissioner of Education.
9.03.5 The superintendent, as
defined in these rules, must provide written assurance that higher priority
recommendations are complete, or in process to be completed, before receiving
funds for subsequent priority recommendations or safety measures not included
in the recommendations of the Commission.
9.04 Subject to appropriations, any funds set
aside by the General Assembly for school safety grants shall follow the
procedure for eligibility and disbursement as set out in 9.03 and in accordance
with applicable state and federal law and rules.
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