Update:
The College Station police department will be putting four more officers on the street by ending its presence in local high schools and middle schools.
Chief Scott McCollum says it’s something they have told College Station school administrators for several years.
McCollum says CSPD will respond to future calls on CSISD campuses.
The College Station school board is considering a contract with the Brazos County sheriff’s office for school resource officers.
Click below for comments from Scott McCollum, visiting with WTAW’s Bill Oliver:
Original story:
Students and staff at College Station’s middle and high schools will be seeing a change of uniformed law enforcement officers on their campuses.
College Station’s school board was told the police department wants to go in a different direction and is phasing out school resource officers after 20 years.
Superintendent Clark Ealy recommended at last week’s board meeting entering a contract with the Brazos County Sheriff’s Office. Dr. Ealy told the board he did not want the district establishing its own police department.
The board is tentatively scheduled at next month’s board meeting to approve paying the sheriff’s office 100 percent of the cost of five SRO’s.
One would continue to be at each high school and College Station Middle School. Where the police department split a SRO between Consolidated Middle School and College View High School, the sheriff’s office would have one at each campus.
The police department was reimbursed 75 percent.
The school district would also pay the sheriff’s office $258,000 dollars in start up costs…most of that for patrol cars.
Click below for comments from superintendent Clark Ealy to the CSISD school board.
Click HERE to read and download the presentation given to the CSISD school board.