k12alerts_apple
Step 1 of 2:

Please do not use this system for issues requiring immediate assistance.
If this is an emergency requiring immediate assistance, please call 911.

Members of the New Milford community, High School, and Middle School can anonymously submit any suspicious activity, behavior, or other related issues to appropriate community or school personnel. We encourage you to report important issues. Once you complete the contact form below, you will receive confirmation that your information has been submitted.

This reporting web form is for New Milford community, High School students, and Middle School students only. If you are a student or parent of a student in grades K-5, please click here to open an alternative incident reporting form if you need to submit an issue or concern.

False reporting will be taken seriously to the full extent of the law.

Reports that lack specific and sufficient detail or anonymous reports that do not allow community or school personnel to communicate with the reporter cannot be effectively investigated.

This system will be monitored between the hours of 7 am to 5 pm daily for the Town, 7 am to 5 pm Monday-Friday for the High School, and 7 am to 3:30 pm Monday-Friday for the Middle School. Any reports submitted outside of these hours or during holidays will be responded to when the monitoring hours are active again.

Submitter Type:
* Select Area Type:
Online Location:
*Report Incident: Please describe the events (Be specific - include date, time, specific location, victim(s) and person(s) involved)
Characters Remaining:
 
Please fill out one of the two sections below in order to setup an anonymous or non-anonymous two-way connection to share additional information. All information submitted is secure, encrypted, and private.

If you are unwilling to submit your information in either of the sections and you wish to submit a report, please utilize the Anonymous Alerts mobile app on Apple or Android.

 
TO BE REPLIED TO ANONYMOUSLY:
To be anonymously contacted by your area, enter your email or cell phone number below. It will not be seen by any community or school staff member as all information you submit is encrypted, private, and anonymous.
* Enter your email
* Confirm your email
Or
* Enter Cellphone
OR
TO REVEAL YOUR INFORMATION:
If you would prefer to reveal your contact information, enter it below:
* Enter your name
* Enter your email
Or
* Enter Cellphone

Please click Submit button only once. Do not click multiple times.

CyberBullying

Cyber-bullying involves the use of information and communication technologies to support deliberate, repeated, and hostile behavior by an individual or group, that is intended to harm others. "Cyberbullying" is when a child, preteen or teen is tormented, threatened, harassed, humiliated, embarrassed or otherwise targeted by another child, preteen or teen using the Internet, interactive and digital technologies or mobile phones. It has to have a minor on both sides, or at least have been instigated by a minor against another minor. Once adults become involved, it is plain and simple cyber-harassment or cyberstalking. Adult cyber-harassment or cyberstalking is never called cyberbullying.

Harassment

Harassment covers a wide range of behaviors enacted by one person to another person that are intended to disturb or upset, and usually repetitive in nature. Harassment can come in many different forms including unwanted text messages. Text messaging harassment is when someone continuously sends text messages to a person when they either aren't supposed to or have been asked to stop doing it.

Bullying

Bullying occurs when a person is exposed, repeatedly and over time, to negative actions on the part of one or more other persons, and he or she has difficulty defending himself or herself. Bullying is aggressive behavior that involves unwanted, negative actions. Bullying involves a pattern of behavior repeated over time. Bullying involves an imbalance of power or strength.

Depression

Most people have felt sad or depressed at times. Feeling depressed can be a normal reaction to loss of a friend, loss of a relative, poor performance in school, and loss of a sporting game, students life's struggles, or an injured self-esteem. But when feelings of intense sadness, feeling helpless, hopeless, and worthless last for many weeks your depression may need to be treated as a medical condition and you may need to seek counseling and talk about how you are feeling to a counselor or physiologist.