Handcuffing
Seven-Year-Olds Won't Make Schools Safer
by
Chase Madar
TomDispatch
Recently
by Tom Engelhardt: The
Visible Government
The
School Security America Doesn't Need: After Newtown: Turning Schools
Into Prisons
Outrage over
the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre may or may not spur any
meaningful gun control laws, but you can bet your Crayolas that
it will lead to more seven-year-olds getting handcuffed and hauled
away to local police precincts.
You read that
right. Americans may disagree deeply about how easy it should
be for a mentally ill convicted felon to purchase an AR-15, but
when it comes to putting more law enforcement officers inside our
schools, the National Rifle Association (NRA) and liberal Democrats
like Senator Barbara Boxer are as one. And when police (or
“school resource officers” as these sheriff’s
deputies are often known) spend time in a school, they often deal
with disorder like proper cops by slapping cuffs on the little
perps and dragging them to the precinct.
Just ask the
three nine-year-old girls and an eight-year-old boy who got into
a fight at their Baltimore elementary school then got arrested
by real police. Or Salecia Johnson, age six, cuffed
and arrested for throwing a tantrum at her elementary school in
Milledgeville, Georgia. Or Wilson Reyes, a seven-year-old
at a Bronx, New York, elementary school who last December 4th was
cuffed, hauled away, and interrogated
under suspicion of taking $5 from a classmate. (Another kid
later confessed.)
The last of
these incidents made the cover of the New York Post, but
the New York City Police Department still doesn’t understand
what they did wrong sure, the first-grader spent about 4
hours handcuffed in a detention room, but that’s “standard
for juvenile arrest.”
Which is precisely
the problem: standard juvenile misbehavior (a five-year-old pitching
a fit, a 12-year-old doodling
on a desk, a 13-year-old farting
in class, a class clown running
around the football field at halftime in a banana suit) is increasingly
being treated like serious crime, resulting in handcuffs and arrest.
If you can’t understand why such “consistency”
is crazy, please desist from reading the rest of this article.
It seems grotesque
that the horrific slaughter of those 20 children in Newtown, Connecticut,
will result in more children getting traumatized, but that’s
exactly where we’re headed with firm bipartisan support.
In his amazing
post-Newtown speech last December, Wayne LaPierre, the CEO and executive
vice president of the NRA, called
for armed guards in all schools a demand widely hailed as
jaw-droppingly nutty. A few weeks later, Senator Barbara Boxer
(D-CA) proposed $50 million in federal grants to install
more metal detectors, surveillance cameras, and National Guard troops
in schools, but made her pitch in the caring cadences of a Marin
County Democrat. And when President Obama ordered more police
in schools (point 18 in his 23-point Executive Order responding
to the Sandy Hook tragedy), it was all over.
So here’s
an American reality of 2013: we will soon have more police in our
schools, and more seven-year-olds like Joseph Andersons of PS 153
in Maspeth, New York, getting
arrested. (He got handcuffed after a meltdown when his
Easter egg dye-job didn’t come out right.)
The
School-to-Prison Pipeline
In fairness
to the feds, similar kinds of local responses were already underway
before the La Pierre-Boxer Axis of Tiny Handcuffs even arose. Across
the country, from Florida
and Connecticut
to Tennessee,
Indiana,
and Arizona,
despite tough budgetary times, municipal governments are now eagerly
scrounging up the extra money for more metal detectors, surveillance
cameras, and armed guards in schools. (The same thing happened
after the Columbine shooting 14 years ago.) No one keeps national
statistics, but arrests
of the 10-and-under set do seem to be on the rise since Sandy Hook.
A typical recent case: in January, a seven-year-old at a Connecticut
school was arrested
by the police for “threatening” a teacher. Jitters
are understandable after the trauma of Sandy Hook but arresting
a seven-year-old?
Truth be told,
we were already well on our way to turning schools into carceral
fortresses before the Sandy Hook slaughter even happened.
In fact, the great national infrastructure project of the past 20
years may be the “school-to-prison pipeline.” After
all, we are the nation that arrested
Isamar Gonzalez for being in her high school early to meet with
a teacher, then arrested her principal, Mark Federman, when he tried
to intervene.
The stats speak
as loudly as the anecdotes: of the Chicago School District’s
4,600
arrests in 2011, 86% were for misdemeanors. That school system
spends
$51.4 million on security guards, but only $3.5 million for college
and career coaches. And for every incident that makes the
news, there are scores that don’t. Despite a growing
body of damning research by civil libertarians of the left and the
right,
including Annette Fuentes’s excellent book Lockdown
High, political opposition to the school-to-prison pipeline
has proven feeble or nonexistent. Brooklyn State Senator Eric
Adams, who represents one of the most liberal districts in the country,
has staked out the civil libertarian outer limit by helpfully suggesting
that Velcro handcuffs might be more suitable than metal ones for
arresting young children.
The metal detector
at the schoolhouse door is threatening to become as iconic an American
symbol as baseball or type 2 diabetes. Not that metal detectors
in place were capable of preventing the massacre
at Red Lake High School in Minnesota in 2005: young Jeffrey Weise
just barged right in and shot six people dead; nor could the metal
detectors at George
Washington High School in Manhattan or Paul
Robeson High School in Brooklyn prevent teens from getting stabbed.
Yet metal detectors and school police proliferate across the country.
One state,
however, truly leads the way. Self-satisfied Yankees have traditionally
slandered the state of Mississippi as a jerkwater remnant of the
past. As for me, I say Mississippi represents the American
future. A new report by advocacy groups shows
how the Hospitality State is leading the nation in cruel and draconian
school over-policing. Felony assault charges for throwing
peanuts on the school bus! Dress codes enforced by handcuffing
a child to a railing for hours for the crime of not wearing a belt!
Cops escorting
a five-year-old home for wearing the wrong color shoes! And constant
arrests of kids for “disorderly conduct.”
Yes, the “Mississippi
model” of non-union teachers plus “zero tolerance”
discipline is the kind of schooling that some of the best and brightest
among our education “reformers” have been touting
and what they are increasingly getting. In fairness, Governor
Rick Perry’s Texas is struggling
with Mississippi for vanguard status, with cutting-edge surveillance
of students and 300,000 misdemeanor arrests in 2010 for “crimes”
like tossing a paper airplane. And Massachusetts is a strong
contender for third place.
Safe
Schools Without Police or Metal Detectors
The over-policing
of our schools is particularly grotesque because it’s so unnecessary.
All schools need order and all students need self-discipline (as
do adults), but putting police and metal detectors in a school often
just adds another layer of violent chaos to an already tough situation.
In my own policy research on school security overkill in New York
City, I’ve found
plenty of high schools, and not in the fancy parts of town, that
do just fine without police or scanners.
In fact, they
do better than fine: one report I coauthored
with advocates from the New York Civil Liberties Union and the Annenberg
Institute for School Reform found that schools without police or
metal detectors actually get significantly better educational results
(higher graduation rates, lower truancy) than their heavily policed
counterparts.
So why aren’t
these low-impact schools being held up as models? Why don’t
City Hall and the New York City Department of Education seem to
want to know about these more effective not to mention cheaper
models? Alas, despite a steady 15-year nationwide drop in
crime, politicos continue to score points with voters by showing
that they aren’t afraid to crack down on children, especially
the working-class Black and Latino youth who bear most of the brunt
of these policies. The psycho-racial-political dynamics are pretty
much the same throughout the country.
But there are
proven, demonstrably better, ways to do school discipline.
Ask Judge Steve Teske whose visionary common sense has brought
down referrals to juvenile court by 70% in Clayton County, Georgia,
by forcing schools to handle minor disciplinary infractions without
handcuffs or police arrests. (In the same period in that county,
serious weapons charges, like bringing guns and knives to school,
have fallen by 80% further evidence that restraining a police
presence actually makes schools safer.)
For another
example of the right way to respond to school violence, look no
further than Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado, site
of the 1999 massacre of 12 students and a teacher by two heavily
armed students. In response, the school made the choice not
to add a phalanx of armed guards. (Columbine actually had an
armed school resource officer on duty the day of the killings, and
he was unable to slow, let alone stop, the carnage.)
In fact, Columbine
today remains an open campus with no metal detector at the front
door. Instead, its administration has worked hard to improve
communications with the student body, trying to build an atmosphere
of mutual trust and respect. Columbine parents have supported
this approach for a simple reason: they don’t want their children
treated like criminals. Because Littleton, Colorado, is a
largely affluent community with political muscle, they’ve
been able to resist the avalanche of punitive measures that have
been generated by every school massacre since the one that took
place at theirs.
Other schools
particularly urban ones with working-class African-American
and Latino students are not so lucky. When President Obama
announced
his pledge of more “resource officers” in schools, he
was quick to qualify it with an “if they want them.”
A laudable sentiment that doesn’t really reflect how things
usually work on the ground.
One Brooklyn
high school principal I interviewed told
me of the constant pressure he experienced from higher up in
the New York City Department of Education to put in a metal detector
and more police personnel. Another school security success story
I profiled
back in 2008 has since had a metal detector rammed
down its educational throat despite its immaculate disciplinary
record. Now, its students are made to feel like potential
criminals from the moment they arrive every morning. The logic
is, in its way, all-American: crazy white kids go on shooting sprees,
and then the screws tighten on Black and Latino kids.
Resisting
the Axis of Tiny Handcuffs
Is there any
hope of preventing the rush to put more first graders in handcuffs?
Yes, but don’t expect any help from the NRA, which is actively
promoting a heavily armed vision of heaven on Earth in which armed
guards will be everywhere, with all public space turned into an
airport security line. As for Barbara Boxer, evidently she
wasn’t as struck as I was by the t-shirts
that Sacramento’s school security police made with the slogan
“U Raise 'Em, We Cage 'Em” emblazoned on the image of
a child behind bars. Or maybe she should talk to constituents like
five-year-old arrestee
Michael Davis or the seven-year-old in San Mateo whom a cop blasted
in the face with pepper spray for climbing a bookshelf. It remains
to be seen if the NRA and Boxer, united, can ever be defeated.
This response
to the Newtown massacre is of a piece with a developing post-9/11
American national-security-lockdown mentality the belief
that an armed response will solve most of our problems, domestic
and foreign. It’s a habit of thought that leads not
figuratively but quite literally to a police state. The over-policing
of schools is just a part of the increasing militarization
of the police nationwide, which in turn fuels the smoldering paranoia
that drives civilians to stock up on AR-15s and the like.
Ending this
cycle of armed fear and violence will require getting police out
of the schools along with the whole battery of security state accessories.
The only way to get there will be via the broadest possible civil
libertarian coalition: Black community groups and Ron Paul types,
immigrants' rights activists and teachers and principals unions
that see the big picture, liberals and conservatives united against
the nanny/thug state.
There could
be no finer spokesperson for such an ecumenical gathering than the
newly crowned Miss America, Alabama-raised Brooklyn-residing Mallory
Hytes Hagan. After wowing the pageant judges with her terpsichorean
prowess, she demonstrated the soundest policy judgment. Asked
if she thought it was a good idea to bring armed guards into schools,
Ms. Hagan’s response was clear. “No, I don’t
think the proper way to fight violence is with violence.”
According
to the New York Daily News, she said it “firmly.”
Let people of goodwill rally behind this model citizen to end all
the grotesque violence in our schools.
Chase Madar
(@ChMadar)
is a civil rights attorney in New York City who has written about
the proven alternatives to school
security overkill.
His latest book is The
Passion of Bradley Manning: The Story Behind the Wikileaks Whistleblower
(Verso).
This article
originally appeared at TomDispatch.com.
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February
28, 2012
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
co-founder
of the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), an alternative history of the mad Bush years. He is also
the author of The
American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s and The
United States of Fear. His latest book is Terminator
Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001-2050 (with
Nick Turse). Nick Turse is the managing editor of TomDispatch.com
and a fellow at the Nation Institute. An award-winning journalist,
his work has appeared in the Los
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Times bestseller Kill
Anything That Moves: The Real American War in Vietnam (The
American Empire Project, Metropolitan Books). You can watch his
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