Bill

Bill > A1933


NJ A1933

NJ A1933
Authorizes Class Three special law enforcement officers to provide security in places of religious worship; makes certain clarifications concerning their use in nonpublic schools.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill expands the scope of where Class Three special law enforcement officers may provide security to include places of religious worship. The bill further requires school districts which hire these officers to provide security in public schools to also hire them for the nonpublic schools in the district. Under the bill, the school district would be responsible for compensating the municipality for the officer's services in both public and nonpublic schools. P.L.2016, c.68 established an additional category of "Class Three" special law enforcement officers under the Special Law Enforcement Officers' Act to provide security in this State's public and nonpublic schools and county colleges. Appointed by the local police department, these officers are authorized to exercise the full powers and duties as those accorded full-time police officers of the department. A person is eligible to be appointed as a Class Three special law enforcement officer if he or she is a retired police officer less than 65 years old and has served as a duly qualified, fully-trained, full-time municipal or county police officer or was regularly employed as a full-time member of the State Police within the previous three years. The person also has to be physically capable of performing the job and have the appropriate law enforcement and safe schools resource officer training. These officers may only be employed to assist municipal police departments and are not to be employed to replace or substitute for full-time police officers. They may only be hired in a part-time capacity. Specifically under the bill, in addition to providing security in public and nonpublic schools and county colleges, Class Three officers could provide security in churches, mosques, synagogues, temples, or any other building used by a congregation as a place of religious worship. The bill does not require school districts to hire Class Three officers, but if they are hired to work in the public schools, these officers also are to be made available in nonpublic schools in the district. School districts, not the public or nonpublic school, would be required to directly pay for these officers under the bill.

AI Summary

This bill expands the authority of Class Three special law enforcement officers, who are retired police officers under 65 years old with recent full-time law enforcement experience, to provide security at places of religious worship, such as churches, mosques, synagogues, and temples, with the same powers as full-time police officers. Additionally, if a school district hires these officers for security in its public schools, the bill mandates that the district must also provide them for nonpublic schools within that district, and the school district, not the individual schools, will be responsible for paying for their services in both public and nonpublic schools. This builds upon a 2016 law that created Class Three officers specifically for security in public and nonpublic schools and county colleges.

Committee Categories

Military Affairs and Security

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Public Safety and Preparedness Committee (on 01/13/2026)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...