THE STATE
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF |
TO: |
EMSC-VESID Committee |
FROM: |
Jean C. Stevens |
SUBJECT: |
Proposed Amendment to the Regulations of the
Commissioner Relating to the Uniform Violent and Disruptive Incident
Reporting System |
DATE: |
June 8, 2006 |
STRATEGIC
GOAL: |
Goals 1 and 2 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
Issue for
Decision
Should the Board of Regents approve the proposed amendment to section 100.2(gg) of the Regulations of the Commissioner relating to the uniform violent and disruptive incident reporting system?
Clarification of Commissioner’s Regulations and State statute.
Proposed
Handling
This question will come before the Regents EMSC-VESID Committee for approval in June.
Procedural
History
The proposed amendment was discussed by the Committee at its November 2005 meeting and action in January was delayed because some revisions were made as a result of public comment received. It was before the Regents in March for approval, but was taken off the agenda due to time constraints.
Background
Information
The proposed amendment is necessary to provide a ranking, standard for reporting, and more concise definition of reportable offenses as required by the uniform violent and disruptive incident reporting system for the reporting of incidents by school districts, BOCES, charter schools and county vocational education and extension boards, as required by Education Law section 2802, and thereby assure to the extent practicable that the reports are uniform and comparable throughout the State with respect to the type of incidents reported and the actions taken in response to such incidents. The proposed amendment also establishes the use of a school violence index as a comparative measure of the level of school violence in a school.
A Notice of Proposed Rule Making was published in the State Register on November 9, 2005. The proposed amendment was subsequently revised in response to public comment and a Notice of Revised Rule Making was published in the State Register on February 8, 2006. Assessments of public comment with respect to both the original published rule and the revised rule making are attached. A Notice of Continuation was published on April 19, 2006.
Recommendation
VOTED: That subdivision (gg)
of section 100.2 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education be amended
as submitted, effective July 13, 2006.
Timetable for
Implementation
Upon adoption at the June Regents meeting, the proposed amendment will become effective on July 13, 2006.
Attachments
AMENDMENT TO THE REGULATIONS OF THE
COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION
Pursuant to sections 207 and 2802 of the Education Law and Chapter 402 of
the Laws of 2005
Subdivision (gg) of section 100.2 of the
Regulations of the Commissioner of Education is amended, effective July 13,
2006, as follows:
(gg)
Uniform violent or disruptive incident reporting system. School
districts, boards of cooperative educational services, charter schools
and county vocational education and extension boards shall submit to the
commissioner annual reports of violent or disruptive incidents that occurred in
the prior school year, commencing with the 2001-2002 school year, in accordance
with Education Law section 2802 and this subdivision.
(1) Definitions: For the purposes of this
subdivision:
(i) "School function" means a
school-sponsored or school-authorized extracurricular event or
activity, regardless of where such event or activity takes place, including
any event or activity that may take place in another state.
(ii)
"School property" shall mean in or within any building, structure,
athletic playing field, playground, parking lot or land contained within the
real property boundary line of a public elementary or secondary school; or in or
on a school bus, as defined in section 142 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law; or at
a school function.
(iii) "Physical injury" means impairment
of physical condition or substantial pain.
(iv) "Serious physical injury" means
physical injury which creates a substantial risk of death or which causes death
or serious and protracted disfigurement or protracted impairment of health or
protracted loss or impairment of the function of any bodily
organ.
(v) "Weapon" means one or more of the
following dangerous instruments:
(a) a firearm, including but not limited to
a rifle, shotgun, pistol, handgun, silencer, electronic dart gun, stun gun,
machine gun, airgun or spring gun;
(b) a switchblade knife, gravity knife,
pilum ballistic knife, cane sword, dagger, stiletto, dirk, razor, box cutter, metal
knuckle knife, utility knife or other dangerous knife;
(c) a billy club, blackjack, bludgeon,
chukka stick, or metal knuckles;
(d) a sandbag or
sandclub;
(e) a sling shot or
slungshot;
(f) a Martial arts instrument, including but
not limited to a kung fu star, ninja star, nin chuck, or
shirken;
(g) an explosive, including but not limited
to a firecracker or other
fireworks;
(h) a
deadly or dangerous chemical, including but not
limited to a strong acid or base, Mace, or pepper
spray;
(i) an imitation
gun;
(j) loaded or blank cartridges or other
ammunition; or
(k) any other dangerous or deadly instrument
possessed with intent to use the same unlawfully against
another.
(vi) "Violent or disruptive incident" shall mean
one of the following categories of incidents that occurs on school property of
the school district, board of cooperative educational services, charter
school or county vocational education and extension board, committed with
or without a weapon (except in the case of weapons
possession):
[(a) Weapons possession.
Possession of one or more of the following dangerous instruments, except
possession in a classroom or laboratory as part of an instructional program or
in a school-related activity under the supervision of a teacher or other school
personnel as authorized by school officials:
(1) a firearm, including but not limited to
a rifle, shotgun, pistol, handgun, silencer, electronic dart gun, stun gun,
machine gun, airgun or spring gun;
(2) a switchblade knife, gravity knife,
pilum ballistic knife, cane sword, dagger, stiletto, dirk, razor, box cutter, metal
knuckle knife, utility knife or other dangerous knife;
(3) a billy club, blackjack, bludgeon,
chukka stick, or metal knuckles;
(4) a sandbag or
sandclub;
(5) a sling shot or
slungshot;
(6) a Martial arts instrument, including but
not limited to a kung fu star, ninja star, nin chuck, or
shirken;
(7) an explosive, including but not limited
to a firecracker or other fireworks;
(8) a deadly or dangerous chemical,
including but not limited to a strong acid or base, Mace, or pepper
spray;
(9) an imitation gun;
(10) loaded or blank cartridges or other
ammunition; or
(11) any other deadly or dangerous
instrument.]
[(b) Weapons use. Unlawful use of a weapon, as defined in
clause (a) of this subparagraph, on school property.
(c)] (a) Homicide. Any conduct which
results in the death of another person.
(b) Sex offenses. (1) Forcible sex offenses. Forcible sex
offenses involving forcible compulsion.
Incidents involving forcible compulsion and completed or attempted sexual
intercourse, oral sexual conduct, anal sexual conduct or aggravated sexual
contact with or without a weapon, including, but not limited to, rape and
sodomy.
(2) Other sex offenses. Other sex offenses
involving inappropriate sexual contact but no forcible compulsion, including,
but not limited to, conduct that may be consensual or involve a child who is
incapable of consent by reason of disability or because he or she is under 17
years of age, provided that such term shall not include consensual sexual
conduct involving only students, and/or non-students 18 years of age or under,
unless at least one of the individuals participating in the conduct is at least
4 years older than the youngest individual participating in the conduct.
[(d) Personal injury
and intimidation. Any of the following acts:]
[(1)] (c) Robbery. Forcible stealing of property from a
person by using or threatening the immediate use of physical force upon that
person, with or without the use of a weapon.
(d) Assault involving serious physical
injury. [The intentional]
Intentionally or recklessly causing [of] serious physical injury
to another person, with or without a [dangerous] weapon ,in violation of the
school district code of conduct [;].
[(2)] (e) Arson. Deliberately starting a fire with intent
to damage or destroy property.
(f) Kidnapping. To abduct, as defined in section 135.00
of the Penal Law, a person, so as to restrain such person with intent to prevent
his or her liberation, by either:
(1) secreting or holding him or her in a
place where he or she is not likely to be found, or
(2) using or threatening to use deadly
physical force.
(g) Other assaults involving physical injury. Intentionally or recklessly causing
physical injury to another person, with or without a weapon, in violation of the
school district code of conduct.
(h) Reckless endangerment. Subjecting
individuals to danger by recklessly engaging in conduct that creates a grave
risk of death or serious physical injury, but no actual physical
injury.
(i) [Criminal harassment] Minor altercations involving physical
contact and no physical injury. [Intentionally striking] Striking, shoving or kicking
another person or subjecting another person to unwanted physical contact [, or
threatening to do the foregoing; following a person in or about a public place;
or otherwise engaging in a course of conduct which alarms] with intent to
harass, alarm or seriously [annoys] annoy another person, but no
physical injury results [; where such behavior, under the district's code of
conduct, is of sufficient seriousness to warrant the suspension or removal of a
student or the referral of a student to the juvenile justice system, or
disciplinary action against or dismissal of a school employee, or notification
of law enforcement of the commission of a crime;].
[(3)] (j) Intimidation,
harassment, menacing or bullying behavior and no physical
contact. Threatening, stalking
or seeking to coerce or compel a person to do something; intentionally
placing or attempting to place another person in fear of imminent physical
injury; or engaging in verbal or physical conduct that threatens another
with harm, including intimidation through the use of epithets or slurs involving
race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, religious practices, gender, sexual
orientation, age or disability that substantially disrupts the educational
process.
[(4) Menacing. Intentionally placing or attempting to
place another person in fear of imminent physical injury;
or]
[(5) Reckless endangerment. Subjecting individuals to danger by
recklessly engaging in conduct which creates a substantial risk of physical
injury.]
(k) Burglary. Entering or remaining unlawfully on
school property with intent to commit a crime.
(l) Criminal mischief.
Intentional or reckless damaging of the property of the school or of
another person, including but not limited to vandalism and the defacing of
property with graffiti.
[(6) Kidnapping. To abduct a person, which
is defined in section 135.00 of the Penal Law as to restrain a person with
intent to prevent his liberation by either:
(i) secreting or holding him in a place
where he is not likely to be found, or
(ii) using or threatening to use deadly physical force.
(e) Sexual offenses. Rape, sodomy, sexual abuse, or other
inappropriate contact of a sexual nature.
(f) Use, possession or sale of drugs or
alcohol. Illegally using or
possessing a controlled substance or marijuana or alcohol on school property,
including having such substance on a person or in a locker or vehicle or other
personal space; or selling or distributing a controlled substance or marijuana
on school property; or finding a controlled substance, marijuana or alcohol on
school property that is not in the possession of any person; provided that nothing herein
shall be construed to apply to the lawful administration of a prescription drug
on school property.]
[(g)] (m) [Theft] Larceny and
other theft offenses. [Wrongfully taking, depriving or withholding property
from another, including but not limited to robbery or theft with force]
Unlawful taking and carrying away of personal property with intent to deprive
the rightful owner of property permanently or unlawfully withholding property
from another.
[(h) Behavior risking injury. Any of the following acts that create a
risk of injury to students and/or school employees:]
[(1)] (n) Bomb threat. A telephoned, written or electronic
message that a bomb, explosive [or], chemical or biological weapon
has been or will be placed on school property.
[(2)] (o) False alarm. Falsely
activating a fire alarm or other disaster alarm.
[(3) Arson. Deliberately starting a fire
with intent to destroy property.]
[(4)] (p) Riot. Simultaneously with four or more persons
engages in tumultuous and violent conduct and thereby intentionally or
recklessly causes or creates a grave risk of physical injury or substantial
property damage or causes public alarm.
[(i) Burglary. Entering school property with intent to
commit a crime.]
[(j) Criminal mischief. Intentional or reckless damaging of the
property of the school or of another person, including but not limited to
vandalism and the defacing of property with graffiti.]
(q) Weapons possession.
Possession of a weapon, except possession in a classroom or laboratory as
part of an instructional program or in a school-related activity under the
supervision of a teacher or other school personnel as authorized by school
officials.
(r) Drug use, possession or sale. Illegally using or possessing a
controlled substance or marijuana, on school property, including having such
substance on a person in a locker, vehicle, or other personal space; selling or
distributing a controlled substance or marijuana, on school property; finding a
controlled substance or marijuana, on school property that is not in the
possession of any person; provided that nothing herein shall be construed to
apply to the lawful administration of a prescription drug on school
property.
(s) Alcohol use, possession or sale. Illegally using or possessing alcohol on
school property, including having such substance on a person or in a locker,
vehicle, or other personal space; illegally selling or distributing alcohol on
school property; finding alcohol on school property that is not in the
possession of any person.
(t) Other disruptive incidents. Other
incidents involving disruption of the educational
process.
(2) Recording of offenses. (i) For purposes
of reporting pursuant to this subdivision, each incident shall be reported once
in the highest ranking category of offense that applies, except that incidents
involving a weapon and one of the offenses listed in clauses (a) through (p) of
subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision shall be reported in the
highest ranking category of offense that applies as an offense committed with a
weapon, and not in weapons possession; and incidents involving drug use,
possession or sale and/or alcohol use, possession or sale and another offense
shall be reported in the highest ranking category in clauses (a) through (q) of
subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision that applies. If the
offense involves only the use, possession or sale of drugs or alcohol, it shall
be recorded in the applicable category of drug or alcohol use, possession or
sale as an incident involving drug or alcohol use, possession or sale only. For
purposes of determining the highest ranking offense pursuant to this
subparagraph, offenses shall be ranked in the order that they appear in clauses
(a) through (p) of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision,
followed by weapons possession, drug use, possession or sale and alcohol use,
possession or sale, and other disruptive incidents.
(ii) The offenses described in clauses (i), (k), (l), (m), (p) and (t)
of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision shall only be reported
where such behavior, under the district's code of conduct, is of sufficient
seriousness to warrant the suspension or removal of a student or the referral of
a student to a counseling or treatment program or transfer of a student to an
alternative education program, or the referral of a student to the juvenile justice system, or
disciplinary action against or dismissal of a school employee, or notification
of law enforcement of the commission of a crime, whether or not the perpetrators
are identified. All incidents involving bomb threats or false alarms as defined
in clauses (n) and (o) of
subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision shall be reported. All
incidents involving intimidation, harassment, menacing or bullying behavior as
defined in clause (j) of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision
that are the subject of a written or oral complaint to the school principal or
other school administrator responsible for school discipline, or are otherwise
directly observed by such principal or administrator, shall be reported.
(3) Submission of
report. Each school district, board of cooperative educational services,
charter school and county vocational education and extension board shall
annually submit its report on violent or disruptive incidents, in the manner
prescribed by the commissioner, on or before [September 30th, commencing with
September 30, 2002] the basic educational data system (BEDS) reporting
deadline or such other date as determined by the
commissioner.
[(3)] (4) Content of report. Each [annual] individual violent
or disruptive incident report shall be in a form prescribed by the commissioner
and shall contain the following information concerning each violent or
disruptive incident that occurred in the prior school
year:
(i) the number and types of offenders,
identified as student, teacher, school safety officer, other school staff,
student intruder, visitor, unknown or other;
(ii) if any offender is a student, the age
and grade of the student;
(iii) the location at which the incident
occurred, including:
(a) the school building in which the
incident occurred or whose real property boundary line includes the athletic
playing field, playground, parking lot or land on which the incident occurred,
and whether the incident occurred in a classroom, laboratory, hall, staircase,
gymnasium, locker room or pool, cafeteria, bathroom, auditorium, playground or
athletic field or otherwise on school grounds; or
(b) where applicable, that the incident
occurred on a school bus; or
(c) where applicable, that the incident
occurred at a school function conducted off school
grounds.
(iv) the types of incident, identified by
category listed in clauses [(1)(iii) (a) to (l)] (a) through (t) of subparagraph (vi)
of paragraph (1) of this subdivision;
(v) whether the incident occurred during or
outside of regular school hours;
(vi) where the incident involves a weapon,
whether the weapon was a firearm,
knife or other weapon;
(vii) whether the incident was bias-related,
drug-related, or gang or group-related;
(viii) the actions taken by the school in
response to the incident, including when the incident was reported to police or
other law enforcement officials and whether disciplinary action was taken
against the offenders;
(ix) any student discipline or referral
action taken against a student/offender, including but not limited to an
out-of-school suspension, a teacher removal, an involuntary transfer to an
alternative placement, an in-school suspension, a referral for community
service, a referral for counseling, or a referral to the juvenile justice system
or the criminal justice system, and the duration of such action;
and
(x) the number and nature of the victims,
identified as a student, teacher,
school safety officer, other school staff or other and the victim's age and
grade where the victim is a student.
[(4)] (5) Preparation of report. Each annual violent or disruptive
incident report shall be in a form prescribed by the commissioner and shall
contain such information as the commissioner shall prescribe, including
but not limited to information on the frequency and types of
incidents, offenders, [actions taken by the school in response]
victims and student discipline or referral actions taken, as is
available on the date the annual report is submitted.
[(5)] (6) Local procedures. The governing body of each school
district, board of cooperative educational services, charter school and
county vocational education and extension board shall establish local procedures
for the reporting of violent or disruptive incidents by each building and/or
program under its jurisdiction. Such procedures shall assure that copies of each
violent or disruptive incident report at the building or program level are
retained for period prescribed by the commissioner in the applicable records
retention schedule, and are available for inspection by the department upon
request; provided that a district or board that adopts an electronic reporting
system may fulfill such requirement by retaining an electronic record of the
information reported at the building or program level.
[(6)] (7) Confidentiality. Pursuant
to subdivision 6 of section 2802 of the Education Law, all personally
identifiable information included in a violent or disruptive incident report
shall be confidential, and shall not be disclosed to any person for use by any
person for purposes other than the purposes of section 2802 of the Education
Law, except as otherwise authorized by law.
(8) School violence index.
Each school year, commencing with the 2005-2006 school year, the
department shall establish a school violence index as a comparative measure of
the level of school violence in a school. The school violence index will be
computed in accordance with a formula established by the commissioner that takes
into account the enrollment of the school and is weighted to reflect the most
serious violent incidents, which shall include but need not be limited to the
following categories of incidents: homicide, forcible sexual offense, robbery,
assault resulting in serious physical injury, arson, kidnapping, and incidents
involving the possession, use or threatened use of a
weapon.
PROPOSED AMENDMENT OF SECTION 100.2(gg) OF
THE REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 101, 207,
305, 2801 and 2802 OF THE EDUCATION LAW AND CHAPTER 402 OF THE LAWS OF 2005,
RELATING TO THE UNIFORM VIOLENT INCIDENT REPORTING SYSTEM
ASSESSMENT OF PUBLIC
COMMENT
Since publication of a Notice of Proposed
Rule Making in the State Register on November 9, 2005 the State Education
Department received the following comments:
COMMENT: A recommendation was received to modify
the requirement to report all incidents of intimidation, harassment, menacing or
bullying by requiring only those incidents that have been investigated and
substantiated as fact to be reported. If this is not possible, than at least
require that only written and not oral complaints be
reported.
DEPARTMENT RESPONSE: The regulations were developed in
consultation with executive and legislative staff and the Division of Criminal
Justice Services and there was an intent to include all incidents of
intimidation, harassment, menacing and bullying that are serious enough to
result in a complaint to the principal’s office or the office of another school administrator responsible
for discipline in the school. The
purpose of this requirement is to
ensure that all complaints of intimidation, harassment, menacing and bullying
are treated seriously and reported, not just those complaints that are
determined by school officials to warrant an investigation and then are
determined to be substantiated. A
high volume of complaints of bullying and harassment may indicate a problem with
the school climate, even if school officials believe that some of the complaints
are unsubstantiated.
COMMENT: There is a federal law making it a
serious crime to have sex or sexually molest or abuse a person with a severe
disability, irrespective of that person’s age, irrespective of the status of the
person doing the abuse or molestation, etc. I suggest that you change these
regulations to reflect the federal law unless you wish to continue countenancing
sexual abuse and molestation of severely disabled persons of any age under your
jurisdiction. I find it incredible
that a SEA to not count “consensual” sexual abuse or molestation of a severely
disabled person as a serious reportable crime pursuant to NCLB’s Unsafe School
Choice provisions.
DEPARTMENT RESPONSE: This commenter has misinterpreted the
language of the proposed regulations.
The regulations do not countenance sexual abuse and molestation of
severely disabled persons. If a
person is unable to consent to sexual contact due to a disability, the
regulations require that the incident be reported, based on the nature of the
incident, in either the forcible sex offenses category or the other sex offenses
category. The affirmative defense
for a consensual sexual act based on the age of the offender would not apply to
such an incident where the victim is incapable of consent by reason of
disability. In fact, the reference
to an individual who cannot consent by reason of disability was included to
accomplish precisely the opposite of what this commenter suggests--to ensure
that sexual offenses against severely disabled individuals must be
reported. The Department will
further address this issue in guidance.
The language
that makes age an affirmative defense in the other sex offense category when the
offender is less than 4 years older than the victim at the time of the offense
was added to address concerns that the regulations should include such an
affirmative defense in order to better align the regulations with the Penal
Law. Pursuant to Penal Law §§130.30
and 130.45, it is an affirmative defense to the crimes of rape in the 2nd degree
and criminal sexual act in the 2nd degree that the defendant is less than 4
years older than the victim at the time of the act. The language was also added so that
consensual sexual contact between minors would not be a reportable offense. This affirmative defense does not apply
to the forcible sex offenses category.
COMMENT: Why was in violation of the
district's code of conduct added to two definitions?
DEPARTMENT RESPONSE: The
language "in violation of the school district's code of conduct" was added to
the assaults involving serious injury and other assaults involving physical
injury categories to ensure that school district officials do not report
injuries involving reckless behavior that are sustained during activities such
as gym classes or school athletic
events unless the conduct that causes the injuries violates the school
district's code of conduct. The
regulations were developed in consultation with executive and legislative staff
and the Division of Criminal Justice Services and the language was also added to
address concerns about the potential for school districts to report incidents
that the uniform violent or disruptive incident reporting system was never designed to
collect.
COMMENT: The regulations exclude reporting
criteria for certain incidents (a) through (h) and (q), (r) and (s). Language should be added
that:
“The offenses described in clauses (a)
through (h) of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision should be
reported whether or not the perpetrators are identified.”
“The offenses described in clauses (q), (r),
and (s) of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision involving the
illegal possession or use of the specified items shall be
reported.”
“The offenses described in clauses (r) and
(s) of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision involving the sale
of the specified items shall be reported whether or not the perpetrators are
identified.”
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: With respect to the
request for additional language on each crime, while we agree that crimes need
to be reported regardless of whether
an offender is identified, we do not believe that it is necessary to add
language to the regulations and think that the suggested language would make the
regulatory language more confusing.
It is the Department’s position that this issue can be effectively dealt
with in guidance.
We
also believe that the suggested drug and alcohol language would be redundant and
can be dealt with more effectively in guidance.
COMMENT: The language in (2) (ii) “… or are otherwise
directly observed by such principal or administrator, shall be reported.” This language does not place
responsibility on teachers or other school personnel to report crimes they
observe.
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: The language on the
reporting of harassment and bullying contemplates that teachers and other school
staff may be the individuals filing a complaint with a school
administrator. Imposing a duty on
teachers and other school staff would go beyond the intended scope of this
rulemaking and the statutory authority under which the regulation is to be
adopted. Requiring reporting by all
school employees could result in double counting of incidents, which would be unworkable. Incidents serious enough to be reported
should be referred to the principal or other school administrator for
discipline. Incidents observed by
the principal or other school administrator were included in the rule to assure
that such incidents are not missed merely because the principal or other school
administrator observed the incident rather than received a complaint for another
individual about it. It will be the
responsibility of the building principal or other administrator to ensure that
each incident is only reported once.
COMMENT: Definitions. To ensure consistency between school
districts and to provide guidance to school districts with respect to the proper
classification of a crime, we urge SED to add the following to the beginning of
the proposed regulation: "(1).
Where conflict or confusion between this subdivision [i.e., proposed regulation]
and the Penal Law exist, the Penal Law shall or case law shall
control."
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: The uniform violent or
disruptive incident reporting
(UVADIR) system is a school, not criminal justice, based system. Part of the legislative intent
underlying the UVADIR is to collect data on "disruptive" incidents that are not
necessarily criminal offenses.
Thus, not surprisingly, pure Penal Law definitions have been shown to not
work in this system. Unlike in
COMMENT: School Function. In conformance with federally recognized
crime reporting systems, only crimes that occur inside a jurisdiction are
recorded in that jurisdiction's crime figures. Accordingly, any crime that occurs in
another location outside of NYC will not be recorded in NYC crime
statistics.
DEPARTMENT
COMMENT: Pursuant to Chapter 402 of
the Laws of 2005, the definition of a "school function" in Education Law
§2801(1) was amended to read as follows: "a school function shall mean a
school-sponsored or school-authorized extracurricular event or activity
regardless of where such event or activity takes places, including any event or
activity that takes place in another state." The regulations' school function
definition has been amended to conform with the aforementioned statutory
amendment. This school function
definition only applies to the uniform violent or disruptive incident reporting
system and is required by State law.
COMMENT: Weapons. a.
While the regulations include the Penal Law §265.01(1) per se weapons
offense, they improperly expand the per se weapons category to include deadly or
dangerous instruments for which an "intent to unlawfully use that item against
another" is required for the item to be considered a weapon, as in Penal Law
§265.01(2).
b. The Regulation misses the critical
component "with intent to use the same unlawfully against another," as in Penal
Law §265.01(2).
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: The Department agrees
that the regulation should be clarified to provide that "other deadly or
dangerous instruments" should be reported only when possessed with an intent to
use the item as a weapon, so that items such as nail files or pens or pencils
that are not ordinarily considered weapons are only reported where there is an
intent to use them as a weapon.
Accordingly, we have revised section 100.2(gg)(1)(v)((k) to read as
follows: "any other dangerous or deadly instrument possessed with intent to use
the same unlawfully against another."
COMMENT: Weapons. In order to account for non-per se penal
law weapons,
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: The Department believes
that the proposed change is unnecessary and detrimental because having two
separate weapons categories would be confusing to school districts. However, nothing prohibits school
districts from collecting data on "dangerous instruments" if they so
choose.
COMMENT: Drug and Alcohol Offenses. The regulation and implementing forms
contemplate the reporting of alcohol possession. This information is beyond the intent of
the UVADIR.
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: Education Law §2802
requires the Commissioner to report to the Governor, Legislature and Board of
Regents concerning the prevalence of both violent and disruptive incidents in
public schools. There is a federal
requirement that the Department report incidents of alcohol possession and use
in public schools. Rather than collect such data separately, the Department has
included alcohol offenses in the UVADIR. The Department has also determined that
alcohol possession is a disruptive incident for uniform violent or disruptive
incident reporting purposes.
COMMENT:
Sexual Offenses. a. The proposed amendment does not comport
with the Penal Law. Serious sex
offenses should be Rape in the 1st degree, Criminal Sexual Act in the
1st Degree, Aggravated Sexual Assault in the 3rd,
2nd and 1st degrees and Sexual Abuse in the 1st
degree.
b. The proposed amendment does not comport
with the Penal Law. Other sex
offenses shall be considered any other offense in the Penal Law, Article
130.
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: The uniform violent or
disruptive incident reporting system is a school, not criminal justice, based
system. The Department initially
referenced the Penal Law sex offenses definitions in guidance and most of the
field found these definitions confusing and unworkable. Unlike in
The
Department has also revised section 100.2(gg)(1)(vi)(b)(1) and 100.2(gg)(8) by
replacing the term "serious sex offenses" with the term "forcible sex
offenses." However, the definition
for this category of sex offenses has remained the same. This category title change was made to
address misperceptions that the Department does not consider all sex offenses to
be serious offenses and to clarify the sex offenses reporting requirements for
school districts. The forcible sex
offenses category is used to report specific incidents of sexual conduct that
involve forcible compulsion. The
other sex offenses category is used to report all other sex offenses. Based on the circumstances under which
the sex offenses are committed, some of the sex offenses that are considered
violent felony offenses, pursuant to Penal Law §70.02, will be reported in the
forcible sex offenses category, while others will be reported in the other sex
offenses category. If
any further clarification is needed regarding which of these two categories a
Penal Law sex offense falls under, such clarification can be made more
effectively in guidance.
COMMENT: Harassment, Menacing, or Bullying
Behavior. It is unclear why SED
groups criminal and non-criminal behaviors together in the caption
"Intimidation, Harassment, Menacing, or Bullying." The terms "bullying and intimidation,"
which do not have Penal Law definitions, are subjective and unsuitable for a
consistent reporting system. The
type of conduct usually associated with bullying can easily be described under
other Penal Law charges if such behavior rises to the level of a
crime.
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: Education Law §2802
requires the Commissioner to report to the Governor, Legislature and Board of
Regents concerning the prevalence of both violent and disruptive incidents in
public schools. The regulations
were developed in consultation with executive and legislative staff and the
Division of Criminal Justice Services and there was an intent that all
disruptive incidents that involve bullying and intimidation should be reported
even if they do not constitute crimes under the Penal Law.
COMMENT: Minor Assaults. The term "assault" is a statutorily
defined term in the Penal Law.
"Assault," as defined by the Legislature, requires physical injury or
attempted physical injury. Using
the term "minor assault" in the proposed Regulation will be confusing and
misleading because its usage here is inconsistent with the definition of assault
in the Penal Law. Moreover, the
definition of "minor assault" in the proposed amendments is a mixture of the
Penal Law offenses of harassment and assault. We suggest that the phrase "minor
altercation" be used instead, i.e., "minor altercation not involving physical
injury."
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: The Department agrees
with the comment and has revised section 100.2(gg)(1)(i) by replacing the term
"minor assaults involving physical contact and no physical injury" with the term
"minor altercations involving physical contact and no physical
injury."
COMMENT: School Violence Index.
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: The school violence index
is intended to measure both potential and actual school violence problems. The number of weapons possession
incidents in a school has repeatedly been found to be a probative indicator of
whether a school could have or has violence problems.
COMMENT: Submission of Report. Even if SED were to accept all of the
suggested changes herein the submission of a report in compliance with SED
regulations will still require
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: Pursuant to Education Law
§2802(3), all public school districts, boards of cooperative educational
services and county vocational education and extension boards are required to
report, on the same date, annually to the Commissioner information concerning
violent and disruptive incidents that occurred in the prior school year. Pursuant to Education Law §2802(5), by
January 1st of each year, the Commissioner must report to the
Governor, Legislature and the Board of Regents concerning the prevalence of
violent and disruptive incidents in the public schools. Thus, in order for the Department to
meet its January 1st reporting deadline, it must set a date for the
submission of local educational agencies' (LEAs) violent and disruptive
incidents data that provides the Department with ample time to review and
analyze the data and to draft the report to the Governor, Legislature and the
Board of Regents.
COMMENT: Weapons Scanning. Many of the schools in
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE: Pursuant to Education Law
§§2801(1) and 2802(3)(f), LEAs are required to report all weapons incidents that
occur on school property, including incidents involving the confiscation of
weapons at school building doors as a result of scanning devices. The regulations were developed in
consultation with executive and legislative staff and the Division of Criminal
Justice Services and the number of weapons possession incidents in a school has
repeatedly been found to be a probative indicator of whether the school could
have or has violence problems.
In
addition, the violent incident
categories that are used for the designation of potentially persistently
dangerous schools have been identified after consultation with executive branch,
legislative, law enforcement and education staff. The categories represent very serious
offenses that threaten the safety and welfare of the student body. Among the issues the Department is
currently considering are the respective weightings of certain incidents,
especially weapons that are discovered and confiscated as a result of scanning
devices that have been purchased by school officials to keep students safe. The issue of weapons confiscation has
broader implications, as many schools do not have these devices. The Department is reviewing 2003-04 data
to determine the most appropriate response to this concern. The fundamental question associated with
this decision is how much of a threat is created by students who attempt to
enter the school building with weapons.
The Department is considering amending the current weightings to provide
the highest point totals to offenses where a person experiences bodily harm or
serious psychological trauma. Incidents such as homicide, assault resulting in
serious physical injury, serious sexual offenses, and kidnapping would be
included in this category. The
second category would include offenses that seriously threaten the safety and
welfare of the students. Arson,
robbery and all incidents that involve the use of a weapon are proposed to be
included in this category. Finally,
weapons possession incidents only would be placed in the third category and
weighted accordingly. Thus, the
Department believes that no further amendments are necessary at this
time.
COMMENT: Historically, Special Act School
Districts have provided services to students who have needs beyond the continuum
of services that local school districts are able to provide. Most frequently, one of the primary
reasons for referral to such a setting as ours is for behavior management
purposes. All but one Special Act
School District serve students with violent behavior, conduct and behavioral
disorders in their profiles. We are
by definition a resource network of facilities where these students are sent to
address their behavior management issues.
Consequently, we recommend that consideration be give to the children we
serve and the manner in which we currently report such
data.
We believe that the collection and public
reporting of such data represent an unfair picture of our mission and the
population we serve.
We believe that if consideration is given to
the needs of the children we serve and the nature of the mission of Special Act
School Districts, a different mechanism should be developed to collect
information about our progress with individual students. The same yardstick that applies to
regular school districts that serve a continuum of student[s] cannot be employed
to measure the very places that the most violent youth are sent for
treatment.
DEPARTMENT RESPONSE: Special act school districts are created
by special acts of the Legislature.
They are designated by the Legislature as public school districts. Pursuant to Education Law §2802(3), the
uniform violent incident reporting system requires public school districts to
annually report to the Commissioner information concerning violent and
disruptive incidents that occurred during the prior school year. Thus, since special act school districts
are public school districts, they are statutorily required to report violent and
disruptive incidents under the uniform violent incident reporting system.
PROPOSED AMENDMENT OF SECTION 100.2(gg) OF
THE REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 101, 207,
305, 2801 and 2802 OF THE EDUCATION LAW AND CHAPTER 402 OF THE LAWS OF 2005,
RELATING TO THE UNIFORM VIOLENT INCIDENT REPORTING SYSTEM
ASSESSMENT OF PUBLIC
COMMENT
Since publication of a Notice of Revised
Rule Making in the State Register on February 8, 2006 the State Education
Department (SED) received the following comments:
COMMENT:
With respect to paragraph (2)(ii) of section
100.2(gg), the regulations exclude reporting criteria for certain incidents (a)
through (h) and (q), (r) and (s).
The following language should be added to make it clear that these
offenses must be reported whether or not the perpetrator is
identified:
“The offenses described in clauses (a)
through (h) of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision should be
reported whether or not the perpetrators are identified.”
“The offenses described in clauses (q), (r),
and (s) of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision involving the
illegal possession or use of the specified items shall be reported whether or
not the perpetrators are identified.”
“The offenses described in clauses (r) and
(s) of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (1) of this subdivision involving the sale
of the specified items shall be reported whether or not the perpetrators are
identified.”
Not including the language above might lead
to an unintended legal interpretation at some point in the future. Given that the proposed regulations
specify reporting criteria for only certain offenses, it could be argued that
its exclusion from other clauses was purposeful and the legislative intent was
to limit the extent of reporting with respect to these other offenses.
In addition, concern was expressed with the clarity of the information
that would be provided via guidance.
Because the goal is the accurate reporting of crimes whether or not a
perpetrator is identified, the language must be clarified.
DEPARTMENT
RESPONSE:
With
respect to the request for additional language on each crime, while we agree
that crimes need to be reported regardless of whether an offender is identified, we do not
believe that it is necessary to add language to the regulations and think that
the suggested language would make the regulatory language more confusing.
It
is the Department’s position that this issue can be effectively dealt with in
guidance, and the Department has posted on its website a Questions and
Answers (Q&A) section
addressing this issue, among others.
The Q& A section is intended to supplement the Directions for
Completing the Summary of Violent and Disruptive Incidents form and the Glossary
of Terms in Reporting Violent and Disruptive Incidents. The website address is:
http://www.emsc.nysed.gov/sss/SDFSCA/uvirpage.htm