Schools

Central Regional Violence and Vandalism Numbers Lower Than Similar Schools

State Department of Education Commissioner releases annual report

by Patricia A. Miller

The Central Regional school district fared better than school districts of similar size, according to the state Department of Education's 2012-2013 Violence, Vandalism and Substance Abuse in the Schools Report.

The report - released on Thursday - includes self-reported incidents from districts that include violence, vandalism, weapons offenses, substance abuse offenses, and harassment, intimidation and bullying (HIB).

The 2012-2013 school year is the second full year of reporting HIB incidents in a second category, following the enactment of the Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights Act in January 2011.

“We are pleased to see positive trends this year," DOE Commissioner Chris Cerf said. "Safe and secure learning environments are a crucial part of preparing kids for college and career, and we have invested significant time to provide support and coaching to districts to reduce incidents of bullying and other forms of violence.”

Central Regional - with an enrollment of 1,946 students in the high school and middle school - had 5 reported violence incidents; no vandalism; 9 reported substance abuse incidents and 22 HIB incidents, for a total of 37 incidents.

By comparison, the Pinelands Regional school district - with a lower enrollment of 1,622 students - had 20 violence incidents, 11 vandalism incidents, 3 weapons incidents, eight substance abuse incidents and 10 HIB incidents, for a total of 51, the report states.

Find out what's happening in Berkeleywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The Public School Safety Law, passed in 1982, requires the Commissioner of Education to file an annual report detailing the extent of violence and vandalism in the state’s public schools.

Districts are required to report incidents that occur on school grounds during school hours, on a school bus, or at school-sponsored events, according to the DOE.

Find out what's happening in Berkeleywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

School districts must report all incidents confirmed by the school board that that meet the definition of HIB, including those that occur off school grounds. They must report the number of HIB investigations conducted; the trainings provided to prevent and reduce incidents of HIB; and the programs designed to create school-wide conditions to prevent and address HIB.

The Violence and Vandalism Report also summarized two and three-year trends in the data.

The total number of incidents reported by districts statewide decreased by nearly 5,000 (19 percent) from 26,139 in 2011-12 to 21,170 in 2012-13.

This decline is due principally to districts reporting 4,284 (36 percent) fewer incidents of harassment, intimidation and bullying in 2012-13 than the year before, the report states.

Other key findings statewide include:

• Violence: Assaults, fights, robbery/extortion and sex offenses all declined between 10 and 15 percent while incidents of criminal threat, i.e., expressing the intent to commit aggravated assault (or similarly serious violent criminal offense), decreased by 106 (40 percent).

Vandalism:  Bomb threat, burglary, damage to property and theft offenses all showed moderate declines of 10 to 16 percent; while fire alarm offenses declined 44 percent. 

• Weapons: The 1,048 incidents represent 5 percent of all incidents reported, with little change in any of the types of weapons involved, except knives, which showed a decrease over the three-year period of 14 percent.

• Substance Abuse: Use of substances decreased 6 percent to 2,500, possession decreased 5 percent to 1,065, and the sale/distribution of substances decreased 21 percent to 138.  Marijuana continues to account for the vast majority of the total number of substance incidents reported (69 percent). 



Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here