San Jose High School Students Confront Board About Homeless People Leaving Needles in Their Cafeteria and Bathrooms – IOTW Report

San Jose High School Students Confront Board About Homeless People Leaving Needles in Their Cafeteria and Bathrooms

Gateway Pundit

A group of 20 high school students from KIPP San Jose Collegiate in San Jose have confronted their school board over homeless people using drugs and leaving needles lying inside the building.

The students allege that homeless people are in the bathrooms and using drugs at the lunch tables.

“We see them coming into our bathrooms. We have them sleeping in our athletic shred and we also have them breaking fences and doing drugs on the lunch table,” student Alfredo Hernández said during the board meeting, according to a report from NBC News.

The high schoolers said that the problem has been ongoing for roughly a year.

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9 Comments on San Jose High School Students Confront Board About Homeless People Leaving Needles in Their Cafeteria and Bathrooms

  1. The first question is WHY are they anywhere near the school let alone IN the school???
    There should be a restraining order to keep worthless bums, druggies and perverts a minimum of a quarter mile away from a school zone!

    11
  2. Apparently, the school board has more important things to worry about than the safety of the school kids. Things like diversity and inclusion and marxism.

    11
  3. How DARE these students reject this diversity training we worked so hard to bring them! We may have to take them away from their obviously rayycisssexisthomotransxenophobic parents so we can ensure they are educated PROPERLY!

    Merrick will be wanting their names. We intend to provide them.

    5
  4. Cmn¢¢guy
    AT 11:42 AM

    “If voting matters in Commifornia.”

    Awww! Ya GOT me!

    It doesn’t.

    But remember that the last guy who asked me how I know stuff like that got 750 million reasons he really wished he hadn’t asked!

    *giggle!*

    3
  5. Imagine a bum encampment springing up by your school 20 years, or more, ago. What are the chances that this would have even been allowed to happen? Zero. Yet here we are.

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