Pembroke Pines schools will have officers in every public school; discussion on how to fund it to continue

PEMBROKE PINES, Fla. ā€“ Pembroke Pines officials agreed to keep School Resource Officers at all Broward County Public Schools in the city starting Monday while they continue negotiations on how to cover the cost.

Rosario Mateo, a Pembroke Pines resident, told commissioners she remembers the cityā€™s response after the 2012 shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.

ā€œThe risk of doing nothing was not an opportunity regardless of the cost of the city,ā€ Mateo said during a Pembroke Pines commission meeting on Wednesday evening at the City Center.

Mateo addressed Mayor Angelo Castillo, Vice Mayor Thomas Good, Jr., and Commissioners Maria Rodriguez, Michael Hernandez, and Jay D. Schwartz.

As part of the SRO program, BCPS paid local police $12,000 per officer during the 2007-08 school year and about $46,250 during the 2011-12 school year. BCPS increased the pay per SRO to $103,000 last year.

ā€œOur kids are worth more than the money the city is currently subsidizing,ā€ said Maria Rosenthal, a Pembroke Pines resident and teacher at Chapel Trail Elementary School.

ā€œWe are underpaid,ā€ said Rodriguez about the deficit adding that the cityā€™s advocates need to lobby state lawmakers for more funding for SROs.

Pembroke Pines Chief Joe Vargas told the commission that a part-time SRO earns about $65,000 and a full-time SROā€™s salary depends on experience. He welcomed a department-specialized SRO unit.

Good said the cityā€™s schools will have SROs ā€œno matter what.ā€ City Manager Charles F. Dodge said the current SROs were part of the cityā€™s budget. He later added that the city has been providing SROs to the cityā€™s charter schools. Vargas said the charters had seven SROs.

ā€œWe will be at our schools,ā€ Dodge said about the cityā€™s SROs being at schools during the transition to a new agreement.

There were fears that the city was not going to provide the service. Nearly through tears, Terry Moody, a Pembroke Pines resident and a head custodian at Chapel Trail, told commissioners that her grandchild was starting school Monday and she only trusts a city SRO with her safety.

ā€œGuardians and even county SROs will not have that vetted investment,ā€ Moody said.

The initial SRO program started as a pilot in 1985. Castillo said the city has been a BCPS vendor ā€œin a smaller part of the pieā€ for decades and the city ā€œdid it for freeā€ when it first started.

ā€œThe kids were in school and we went to protect them ... Thatā€™s what the city does, and we had to front the money from our savings,ā€ Castillo said during a commission meeting Wednesday night.

City Attorney Samuel S. Goren agreed the state requires the school board to have an armed safety officer at every school. The Broward County Public Schools Police partners with the Broward Sheriffā€™s Office to run an armed guardian program to fill in the gaps.

Earlier during the meeting, Jaime Alberti, the BCPS chief safety and security officer, and BCPSP Chief Kevin Nosowicz stood before the commission to support a hybrid program with SROs and guardians.

ā€œWe have 17 schools in Fort Lauderdale that we cover solely with guardians,ā€ Nosowicz told the commission adding that an SRO rotates between the schools.

Nosowicz said many of the guardians were sometimes better than some police officers. He said many had served in the military and a few were former federal agents.

BCPS presentation Wednesday night during a Pembroke Pines commission meeting. (BCPS)

Hernandez, a father with two kids in public school, was among the parents in Pembroke Pines who said they prefer SROs over guardians with or without a hybrid option.

ā€œI just donā€™t feel confident in guardians with one officer that floats in those schools,ā€ Hernandez said.

Schwartz agreed. He used a small bottle of water to hold up an ā€œI want SROs in EVERY PPines Schoolā€ sign at the dais during the commission meeting.

The agenda for the 5-hour-long commission meeting included motions related to SROs at nine elementary schools, three middle schools, and two high schools in the city.

The police sponsored three motions for agreements for the 2023-24 school year on motion 20, recent summer school with part-time SROs on motion 25, and the 2024-25 and 2025-26 school years on motion 28. The city estimated a $2.1 million subsidy over the three-year SRO agreement with BCPS.

ā€œWe have to find the funds to cover that cost because our SROs were paid for that full year,ā€ Dodge told commissioners during the meeting about the 2023-24 school year.

From Aug. 14 to June 11, there was one SRO at each of the nine elementary schools: Chapel Trail, Lakeside, Palm Cove, Panther Run, Pasadena Lakes, Pembroke Lakes, Pembroke Pines, Pines Lakes, and Silver Palms. Hernadez said high schools have the SROs.

The agreement on the table from Aug. 5 through June 2026 had the school board funding four SROs at $454,230 for 2024-25 and about $476,942 for 2025-26 ā€” leaving a 2-year overage of about $22,452. Goren said the formal proposal was delivered from the school district to the city.

ā€œIf you made suggested changes to the documents, those changes will have to go back to the school board,ā€ Goren told commissioners about the possibility of a counter-proposal.

In response, Hernandez sponsored a new motion for the city to pay SROs to stay in place at the nine elementary schools until Dec. 23, the beginning of winter break, while negotiations continue with BCPS.

ā€œAny Pembroke Pines SRO officer who may be displaced post-Dec. 23 will be receiving their 3% special unit pay for a minimum of six months,ā€ Hernandez said about his motion.

Rodriguez seconded the motion. Castillo said the city will pay for the elementary schoolsā€™ SROs until Dec. 23, so that negotiations continue with the Broward County School Board. Good said the motion would put the city at a higher loss.

ā€œWe are not going to get reimbursed for any of those 9 ... At least my proposal, we would have been reimbursed up to $108,000 a year, which would have meant that we would only be spending $50,000 per SRO, not $175,000,ā€ Good said.

The motion failed 4 to 1 only with Hernandezā€™s ā€œreluctantā€ support. Castillo then stepped up and presented a motion to reconsider, but it didnā€™t have support from Rodriguez, Good, or Schwartz. There were attempts to introduce other motions, but Castillo did not allow it.

The commission requested a workshop with the school board to request they go back to the May 1st proposal to consider accepting the rate, and the meeting ended before midnight.

WATCH THE MEETING


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Saira Anwer joined the Local 10 News team in July 2018. Saira is two-time Emmy-nominated reporter and comes to South Florida from Madison, Wisconsin, where she was working as a reporter and anchor.

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