The event was open to administrators and teachers from schools throughout the Fort Bend County area.
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"We want to make sure our parents and our community at Fort Bend County know that the safety of our students is paramount and there's nothing we're not willing to do to make sure our kids are safe," said Dr. Roosevelt Nivens, the superintendent at Lamar Consolidated ISD.
Nivens and Dr. Robert Bostic, the superintendent of Stafford ISD, hosted the first such public safety symposium in 2018.
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This year's symposium was well in the works after the tragic shooting in Uvalde. The superintendents say the event is designed to go beyond the standard training all teachers and administrators go through every year.
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"We need to make sure we train all the people in the boat. We need to make sure everybody gets it who's out in the school community, so it becomes common language," Bostic said, whose brother, a retired Secret Service agent, was among the speakers. "The culture that says if we see something, say something. When we talk to the families out there, we know it's a burden. Some of these issues require more dollars. Dollars we don't have yet."
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