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School officials propose 27 vape detectors for high-school restrooms; trustees press on privacy, vandalism and staffing
Summary
Assistant Superintendent Wolf urged purchase of 27 Halo 3C vape detectors for high-school restrooms (cost ~$32,570, funded by 31aa), describing detection, response teams and training; trustees questioned device visibility, potential vandalism, which phones receive alerts, after-hours triggers and whether locker rooms are included.
Assistant Superintendent Wolf presented a proposal to purchase and install 27 Halo 3C smart sensors across the districthigh schools (Kettering, Mott and Durant) to detect vaping, loud noises and other threats in student restrooms. Wolf said the devices send near-instant text alerts to designated response-team members and that the purchase and annual software subscriptions would be funded from the 31aa student safety and mental-health allocation, with a cooperative-quote total of about $32,570.
Wolf framed the devices as a deterrent and part of a broader response system that includes hall monitors, administrators, safety…
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