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Cops Called To School After 9-Year-Old Says The Word 'Brownies'
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When? This feed was archived on June 12, 2023 18:22 (). Last successful fetch was on July 28, 2022 18:07 ()
Why? Feed inactivo status. Nuestros servidores no pudieron recuperar un podcast válido durante un período sostenido.
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Manage episode 315711614 series 3289055
Police were called to a New Jersey primary school following a 9-year-old third grader said the word brownies while discussing snacks, his mom affirmed.
One more understudy at William P. Tatem Elementary School in Collingswood confused the remark and thought it was said in a bigoted manner, the Philadelphia Inquirer.
"He said they were discussing brownies. Who precisely did he irritate?" Stacy dos Santos, the kid's mom, told the Philadelphia Inquirer. An educator therefore called police.
Dos Santos conceded that the episode made her mull over sending her youngster to the school in the fall.
"I'm not happy with the organization [at Tatem]. I don't confide in them and neither does my youngster," she said. "He was threatened, clearly There was a cop with a weapon in the holster conversing with my child, saying 'Let me know what you said.' He didn't have anyone on his side."
Officials likewise addressed the youngsters' folks, and the episode was accounted for to the New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency.
Collingswood Police Chief Kevin Carey expressed during a gathering with school authorities that they should report episodes to police, including cases "as minor as a basic verbally abusing occurrence that the
School would regularly deal with inside."
Police likewise said they were encouraged to allude pretty much every case to Child Protection and Permanency.
This strategy was a shift from the past
One under the Memorandum of Agreement
Between the police and schools in New
Jersey – in which episodes were accounted for
Just when considered sufficiently genuine. Such
Move was ordinarily made in cases
Including medications, weapons or rape.
Since the gathering, officials were called to the school as regularly as five times each day. "Some of it is simply average small child conduct," Megan Irwin, an educator, told the Philadelphia Enquirer. "Never before in my long periods of instructing have I felt awkward dealing with a circumstance or felt as I didn't have the foggiest idea how to deal with a circumstance."
The city hall leader, police and Camden County Prosecutor's Office eventually organized a gathering to examine occurrences.
"In our conversation today, you and your staff made obviously our new gathering was to build up the materialness of the Memorandum of Agreement, yet not to extend its terms," Collingswood Mayor Jim Maley wrote in a letter to the examiner's office, the Collingswod Patch revealed.
--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mark-gowz/support192 episodios
Series guardadas ("Feed inactivo" status)
When? This feed was archived on June 12, 2023 18:22 (). Last successful fetch was on July 28, 2022 18:07 ()
Why? Feed inactivo status. Nuestros servidores no pudieron recuperar un podcast válido durante un período sostenido.
What now? You might be able to find a more up-to-date version using the search function. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.
Manage episode 315711614 series 3289055
Police were called to a New Jersey primary school following a 9-year-old third grader said the word brownies while discussing snacks, his mom affirmed.
One more understudy at William P. Tatem Elementary School in Collingswood confused the remark and thought it was said in a bigoted manner, the Philadelphia Inquirer.
"He said they were discussing brownies. Who precisely did he irritate?" Stacy dos Santos, the kid's mom, told the Philadelphia Inquirer. An educator therefore called police.
Dos Santos conceded that the episode made her mull over sending her youngster to the school in the fall.
"I'm not happy with the organization [at Tatem]. I don't confide in them and neither does my youngster," she said. "He was threatened, clearly There was a cop with a weapon in the holster conversing with my child, saying 'Let me know what you said.' He didn't have anyone on his side."
Officials likewise addressed the youngsters' folks, and the episode was accounted for to the New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency.
Collingswood Police Chief Kevin Carey expressed during a gathering with school authorities that they should report episodes to police, including cases "as minor as a basic verbally abusing occurrence that the
School would regularly deal with inside."
Police likewise said they were encouraged to allude pretty much every case to Child Protection and Permanency.
This strategy was a shift from the past
One under the Memorandum of Agreement
Between the police and schools in New
Jersey – in which episodes were accounted for
Just when considered sufficiently genuine. Such
Move was ordinarily made in cases
Including medications, weapons or rape.
Since the gathering, officials were called to the school as regularly as five times each day. "Some of it is simply average small child conduct," Megan Irwin, an educator, told the Philadelphia Enquirer. "Never before in my long periods of instructing have I felt awkward dealing with a circumstance or felt as I didn't have the foggiest idea how to deal with a circumstance."
The city hall leader, police and Camden County Prosecutor's Office eventually organized a gathering to examine occurrences.
"In our conversation today, you and your staff made obviously our new gathering was to build up the materialness of the Memorandum of Agreement, yet not to extend its terms," Collingswood Mayor Jim Maley wrote in a letter to the examiner's office, the Collingswod Patch revealed.
--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mark-gowz/support192 episodios
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