Negligent Hiring of School Staff: When Schools Are Liable for Who They Employ
Schools have a duty not just to educate and supervise students—but to hire responsible, qualified staff. When a school hires someone with a known or discoverable history of misconduct or abuse, and a student is harmed as a result, the school can be held legally liable for negligent hiring.
What Is Negligent Hiring?
Negligent hiring occurs when an employer—such as a school—fails to perform due diligence when hiring an employee. This includes failing to conduct background checks, verify qualifications, or follow up on prior misconduct. If that employee later harms a student in a way that could have been anticipated, the school may be held accountable.
Why Negligent Hiring Of School Staff Matters
Teachers, aides, coaches, and other school staff are in direct, often unsupervised contact with children. When schools put someone in a position of authority or care without vetting them thoroughly, it creates real danger—especially if the person has a history of:
- Physical or verbal abuse toward students
- Sexual misconduct or inappropriate behavior
- Substance abuse problems
- Criminal convictions involving violence or minors
In New York, public schools are expected to meet basic hiring protocols and can be found liable under state education law if they fail to do so and that failure leads to student harm.
Common Examples of Negligent Hiring in Schools
- Hiring a teacher who was previously terminated for physical discipline and not reviewing their prior employment record
- Employing a staff member who failed a background check or was flagged in a child abuse registry
- Failing to follow up on complaints from a prior school district about misconduct
Legal Responsibility: What Must Be Proven
For a negligent hiring claim to hold up in court, you typically must show that:
- The school had a duty to screen the staff member properly
- The school failed in that duty (i.e., missed red flags or skipped background checks)
- The staff member acted inappropriately or illegally toward a student
- The misconduct was foreseeable based on the staff member’s history
- The student suffered actual harm as a result
New York school districts are not automatically liable for every bad act by an employee. Courts look at whether the staff member was acting within the scope of their duties and whether the school knew or should have known about their history of misconduct.
Mandatory Screening in New York
New York law mandates fingerprinting and criminal history checks for all school employees through the Office of School Personnel Review and Accountability (OSPRA). Schools that skip or rush this process risk putting students in danger—and exposing themselves to lawsuits.
Federal Oversight and Best Practices
According to the U.S. Department of Education, proper hiring practices include reference checks, certification verification, and active monitoring of staff behavior. Ignoring these standards can violate both state and federal student protection guidelines.
What Parents Can Do
- Report suspicious or concerning staff behavior immediately to school administration and, if necessary, local law enforcement.
- Document all complaints and communications with the school about the issue.
- Request employment policy info from your district to understand how staff are screened and supervised.
- Seek legal advice if your child has been harmed by a staff member who shouldn’t have been hired in the first place.
Why This Issue Continues
Despite laws and protocols, negligent hiring still occurs. Sometimes it’s due to budget constraints or rushed hiring practices. Other times, it’s willful ignorance or failure to investigate. Either way, the school can be held accountable if it places children at risk through carelessness.
Children Deserve To Be Safe
Children deserve to be safe at school—and that safety starts with the people who are hired to work there. If a staff member harms a student and that harm could have been avoided through proper screening, the school may be legally liable. No family should have to wonder whether their child is safe from staff misconduct. And no school should get away with ignoring red flags. If you need assistance, contact New York School Injury Attorney Brett J. Nomberg at 212-808-8092.

