Overview
- The state began operating the model in 100 schools across 89 municipalities, covering roughly 53,000 students.
- About 208 retired or reserve police and military personnel are serving as non‑teaching monitors focused on security, discipline and extracurricular projects, with semestral performance reviews by directors and students.
- Uniform delivery was delayed after suppliers failed quality tests by the Technological Research Institute, so schools started with provisional shirts and a gradual rollout of official items.
- Schools are adopting formations, the national anthem and stricter appearance rules such as limits on hair styles and accessories, drawing mixed reactions from students as routines are phased in.
- Official figures cite R$7.2 million for monitor payments, but independent reporting points to about R$17 million a year and per‑diem pay up to roughly R$6,000 monthly, and the program proceeds after earlier court suspensions with Supreme Court review still a reference point.