Denver School Board member Auon'tai “Tay” Anderson is scrambling for political cover to explain to his radically progressive base why he reversed course and allowed police back in schools to protect students from shooters.
The mayor made him do it, said Anderson, peddling a weak-kneed excuse while
The Denver School Board spent five hours meeting behind closed doors after the shooting of two employees by a student who later committed suicide, only to produce a weak, short-term solution to secure high schools from violence.
Board members, many of whom are currently up for reelection, held a pr
In 2020, Denver’s school board unanimously terminated the district’s contract with Denver police and removed school resource officers (SROs). Since then, guns and other weapons have proliferated on school grounds.