Lake Travis - Westlake Edition | February 2024

BY CHLOE YOUNG

The cost

Looking forward

District o”cials are now working on an application to create the department with the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement. As a part of that process, the district will need to name a police chief, hire an administrative assistant and adopt a board policy outlining how the department will be structured, Miller said. O”cials are hoping to have the application submitted in the spring and receive approval in the summer. Once approved, the district can o”cially hire police o”cers with the goal of having some o”cers and school marshals on campuses by fall. LISD will continue its school resource o”cer partnerships with local police departments until those o”cers are no longer needed, Miller said. “While there is a potential cheaper option out there, sometimes you get what you pay for,” Miller said. “We want to be sure that we are providing the ... best people for our campuses.” Implementation timeline The district hopes to have next steps completed by the following tentative dates, Miller said. Late winter: Name police chief and adopt board policy Spring: Submit TCOLE application Summer: Receive TCOLE decision August: Assuming TCOLE approval, assign o”cers/school marshals to some campuses

cut expenses as the majority goes to sta salaries. “If the state does not kick in additional funding, then we’re going to have to make some very dicult choices about what we stop doing in order to make this mandate happen,” Gearing said. However, some members of the community have expressed concerns that the district should have chosen a less costly option to arm its cam- puses, such as arming teachers through a school guardian program.

In ‚scal year 2023-24, the district transferred $1.1 million out of its fund balance to begin the police department, Gearing said. While HB 3 allocates districts $10 per student and $15,000 per campus to meet its requirements, the $1.1 million from the bill in state funding has already been allocated for the district’s existing school resource ocers, Miller said. School board President Gloria Gonzales-Dhola- kia said there’s nowhere in the district’s budget to

Costs versus funding under HB 3

Training: $10,000 Insurance (annually): $40,000 Administrative assistant: $54,903.50 Equipment: $84,000 Assistant chief: $126,906.22

State funding Leander ISD expenses

$1.14M School safety allotment

Police chief: $156,019.56 10 marshals: $631,307.50

Local SROs and drug dogs $1.17M

$1.1M

Phase 1 of police department

SOURCES: LEANDER ISD, TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY COMMUNITY IMPACT

In their own words

“I think with smaller classrooms and more school counselors, we’d be able to do more on our campuses with

“It’s going to be our job to make sure ... the presence of those ocers is really comforting as opposed to intimidating.” BRUCE GEARING, LEANDER ISD SUPERINTENDENT

school safety, but that’s not one of our choices.” GLORIA GONZALES DHOLAKIA, LEANDER ISD SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT

SOURCE: LEANDER ISD COMMUNITY IMPACT

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LAKE TRAVIS WESTLAKE EDITION

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