Reporting Safety Concerns
Report a Safety Issue
Visit the below resources regarding safety concerns:
Responding to and Reporting Hate-Motivated Incidents and Crimes (October 2020)
The San Mateo Union High School District (District) is committed to providing a safe learning and working environment that is free from discrimination and harassment. Hate-motivated incidents and crimes jeopardize both the safety and well-being of all students and staff. Current law requires school districts to document and report any and all hate-motivated incidents and crimes to permit the development of effective programs and techniques to combat crime on school campuses.
The District will not tolerate hate-motivated incidents/crimes based on race, color, national origin, religion, disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, or retaliation in any form for reporting such incidents/crimes.
This bulletin is aligned with District policy on Bullying and the Federal Law Title IX for the documentation and reporting of hate-motivated incidents/ that manifests evidence of hostility toward the target because of his or her actual or perceived race, color, national origin, religion, disability, sex, sexual orientation or gender identity. Such action includes, but is not limited to, threatening telephone calls, hate mail, physical assault, vandalism, cross burning, destruction of religious symbols, symbols of hate, or fire bombings. This also includes threats or hate mail sent by electronic communication.
Responding to and Reporting Bullying, Hazing, and Hate-Motivated Incidents and Crimes (June 2021)
The San Mateo Union High School District (District) is committed to providing a safe learning and working environment that is free from discrimination and harassment. The District takes a strong position against bullying, hazing, hate-motivated acts, or any behavior that infringes on the safety or well-being of students, employees, or any person within the District’s jurisdiction.
Current law requires school districts to document and report any and all hate-motivated incidents and crimes to permit the development of effective programs and techniques to combat crime on school campuses. District policy requires all schools and all personnel to promote mutual respect, tolerance, and acceptance among students and staff. Article 1, Section 28(c) of the California State Constitution states: “All students and staff of public, primary, elementary, junior high and senior high have the inalienable right to attend campuses which are safe, secure and peaceful.” Schools’ compliance with ensuring “safe, secure and peaceful” campuses shall also be referenced and reflected in the development of each school’s Safe School Plan.
This policy bulletin shall encompass behaviors or actions that occur among students, District employees, and associated adults. This policy is applicable to all areas of the District’s jurisdiction, including school and District-related activities, events, programs, and traveling to and from school. This bulletin is aligned with District policy and procedures for the documentation and reporting of hate-motivated incidents/ that manifests evidence of hostility toward the target because of his or her actual or perceived race, color, national origin, religion, disability, sex, sexual orientation or gender identity. Such action includes, but is not limited to, threatening telephone calls, hate mail, physical assault, vandalism, cross burning, destruction of religious symbols, or fire bombings. This also includes threats or hate mail sent by electronic communication.
The San Mateo Union High School District is pleased to announce that we have enrolled with STOPit, by STOPit Solutions.
STOPit is an online reporting tool designed to deter and mitigate bullying, cyber abuse, and other inappropriate behaviors, consisting of an app and a back-end incident management system for school administrators.
Report a safety concern online through StopIt - an anonymous reporting tool or download the app:
Hillsdale Access Code: hhsknights
Specifically, the program educates students to:
- Recognize the signs of at-risk behaviors
- Take every sign and signal seriously
- Report it anonymously through STOPit App/Web or 24/7 Incident Response Center
- Submit photo or video evidence (App/Web Only)
- Alert designated administrators to issues and risks early, before they escalate
Title IX
Title IX protects people from discrimination based on sex in education programs or activities that receive Federal financial assistance.
Title IX states that: No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.
Learn more about Title IX and Sex Discrimination enforced by the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) at U.S. Department of Education.
How to file a Title IX Complaint with the District.
Title IX Training Materials: 2023 Presentation
Title IX Complaint Form: English | Spanish
To learn more, read about Uniform Complaint Procedures (BP-AR 1312.3)
Williams Uniform Complaint Forms: English | Spanish | Chinese
Anti-Bullying
The Board of Trustees recognizes the harmful effects of bullying on student well-being, student learning, and school attendance and desires to provide a safe school environment that protects students from physical and emotional harm. No individual or group shall, through physical, written, verbal, visual, or other means, harass, sexually harass, threaten, intimidate, cyberbully, cause bodily injury to, or commit hate violence against any student or school personnel, or retaliate against them for filing a complaint or participating in the complaint resolution process.