Kinsey Gray told the Alvin ISD Board of Trustees at the June 9 open forum that she lost her only son, 8-year-old Nicholas James Gray, following a choking incident at school on Feb. 9, 2026, and urged the district to require in-person critical emergency-response training for staff rather than video-based courses.
"I respectfully urge the district to consider requiring critical emergency response and safety training to be conducted in person indefinitely rather than through video-based courses," Gray said. She described the loss as "something no parent should ever have to experience" and said that while in-person training was offered after her son’s death, video courses had previously been used. "When medical emergencies occur, panic happens and seconds matter," she told the board.
Gray said she was not there to place blame but to press for a change she described as lifesaving: the ability for staff to physically practice skills so they can act quickly in an emergency. The public comment period is a forum for trustees to hear concerns; the board may direct staff to follow up but cannot take immediate action on items not posted on the agenda.
The transcript records sympathy from the room and the board thanked Gray for speaking. The district previously noted that some in-person training was offered after the incident; Gray urged that in-person practice be required rather than optional or replaced by video modules.
Provenance: Public comment recorded in the open forum (SEG 1687–1748).