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Student harm, suicide concerns up in shutdown

AG reports on Safe2Say program

Reports of suicidal or self-harming thoughts made to Pennsylvania’s mandatory harm reporting system for schools increased after classrooms were shut down in March because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office released an annual report Friday showing tips to the Safe2Say Something program had dropped since the pandemic sent students home for remote learning.

But an increased portion of the calls, online tips and other reports that did come in were for issues of suicidal thoughts or self-harm, data from the system showed.

Between July 2019 and March 13, when Gov. Tom Wolf ordered schools closed for the remainder of the year, about 17 percent of tips were related to those two categories. Between March 13 and the end of June, tips related to suicide or self-harm jumped to 37 percent of all reports.

The program funnels tips to a 24-hour call center at the attorney general’s office in Harrisburg. The tips include things like school safety, bullying, drug or tobacco use as well as issues of suicidal thoughts, depression or self-harm.

The program passed the Legislature in 2018 with nearly unanimous support, mandating its use in all K-12 schools including public, charter, vocational and private schools. During its first month in use, the line received more than 4,900 tips.

“We have to try innovative new ways to reach kids in need, including making child protective and mental health services available at home,” Attorney General Josh Shapiro said.

The annual report also notes the system was on track to receive 37,000 tips before schools closed for COVID-19.

The report’s authors noted that like the state’s child protection hotline to report abuse, the Safe2Say Something program saw a drop in use when kids were at home. It ended the school year with nearly 23,750 tips.

“We need additional funding to ensure there is at least one mental health counselor in every school building in Pa.,” Shapiro said in a news release. “We must expand mental health services in our schools.”

According to Shapiro, there are no costs to schools to participate in Safe2Say. The reporting system’s entire annual budget, including 24/7 staffing and technology, is funded through the state’s General Fund at $1.6 million.

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