That context matters. This was not a random encounter. It was, by police’s own description, a case involving a teacher and a student, and a clear abuse of a position of trust.

Parents are not “overreacting” when they ask hard questions after a conviction like this. They are doing exactly what they should do.

If a school, program, or youth arts organization says “student safety is our top priority,” then this is the moment to prove it in public, in plain language, with specifics.

Who can contact students directly? Through what channels? Under what supervision? What gets flagged? Who reviews it? How quickly? What is the mandatory reporting protocol? What independent oversight exists when concerns involve staff with community status?

Because safeguarding is not a slogan. It is a system. And if the system only shows up after a child is harmed, then it is not a system. It is damage control.

One man has been sentenced. That legal chapter is closed.

The accountability chapter is not. And every parent asking for answers right now is asking the only question that matters: what changes today so this never happens again?

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