DENVER
(AP) — School districts nationwide are working to remove police
officers from campuses, but some Black and Indigenous educational
leaders are resisting the push prompted by the national reckoning over
racial injustice and police brutality.
Some
say the system is hamstrung by a complicated mix of police response
policies and a lack of support for alternative programs, which plays a
role in students of color being disproportionately punished and arrested
— the so-called school-to-prison pipeline. Some support individual
officers skilled at working with students. Others say they need to learn
more as activists urge change.
Cities from Portland, Oregon, to Denver to Madison, Wisconsin, have taken steps to remove police from schools
following George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police. But
some school leaders like Stacy Parrish, principal of Northeast Early
College in Denver, said school resource officers are being unfairly
blamed for students of color ending up in the criminal justice system.
Parrish,
a member of the Klamath Tribes, said she supports the movement to
combat overpolicing but believes it’s irresponsible to eliminate school
resource officers and replace them with counselors and social workers
without changing the overall approach to discipline.
“Generalizations
and romanticizations aren’t getting us anywhere when our democracy
needs our public schools more than ever,” Parrish said.
The
problem lies in the tangle of state laws and school policies that
mandate when police respond — such as a student suspected of selling
drugs — and a lack of money for alternative ways of helping troubled
students, she said. School policy in Denver requires overworked
counselors to take students to court if they repeatedly miss class,
while drug treatment programs are underfunded but a better solution for
students who bring drugs to school, Parrish said.
Some
school officials have rejected activists’ demands to cancel police
contracts. Chicago’s school board left the decision to local councils
mostly comprised of parents.
Kenwood
Academy, a predominantly Black public school near the University of
Chicago, has two officers who focus on protecting students from problems
like shootings or domestic disputes between parents on campus,
principal Karen Calloway said.
She
said one officer stopped dismissal after learning of a nearby shooting
last year, and many parents thanked her for the swift action.
“That, to me, was worth the money that we spend on school resource officers alone,” Calloway said.
The officers, whom the local council voted this month to keep, can’t discipline students, she said.
In
San Francisco, the school board voted in June not to renew its
agreement with police before getting a recommendation from its African
American Parent Advisory Council. In a letter to the board, the group
said it was divided: Some saw school resource officers as the only
positive relationship between police and schools.
“Members
of our Leadership Team have been extremely vocal at previous Board of
Education meetings, asking that an opportunity be created to widely
hear the voices of the Black community,” the letter said. “To our
knowledge, that has not been done.”
The
council is planning a town hall to discuss police in schools but said a
more pressing concern could be how teachers and staffers can get police
involved in disciplinary issues that are supposed to be off limits to
police and disproportionately push Black students out of school. It
noted that 35% of students suspended in the 2017-2018 school year were
Black, though they only make up 6% of the population in the San
Francisco Unified School District.
The district didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Latoya
Pitcher, who’s on the Black parents council, said she’s hopeful those
supporting equity won’t implement knee-jerk solutions to address the
embarrassment that comes with exposing systemic racism.
“I am grateful that SFUSD today has a progressive board that fights against all ‘-isms,’” she said.
In
Denver, Kevin Wilson, who oversees student discipline at the Collegiate
Prep Academy, a mostly Black and Latino school, said he supports the
police reform movement. Wilson, who is Black, had difficulties with
police growing up in the neighborhood where he now works, but he thinks
school officers have unfairly become “collateral damage” in the
movement.
Because
his school has no officer, he said he’ll sometimes ask a Black and
bilingual officer from a nearby school to meet with particularly
recalcitrant students. The officer often will work with the student
instead of writing a ticket, Wilson said.
“That is what our community needs,” he said.
Denver
Public Schools board member Tay Anderson, who pushed to end the
contract with police, said he would like school resource officers to
remain a specialized unit within the Police Department but only go to
schools when called.
Creating
a new security plan will involve looking at changes to the discipline
policy, Anderson said. And the district’s roughly 1,500 employees are
getting implicit bias training to try to prevent students of color from
being disciplined more harshly.
Another
district in the Denver area has kept its officers but also has more
funding for mental health support, which can help prevent students from
getting in trouble with the law.
Aurora
Public Schools gets about $10 million a year for mental health staffers
and programs from a voter-approved tax. The district has worked out an
agreement with Aurora police, who are under scrutiny for last year’s
death of Black 23-year-old Elijah McClain, to delineate which issues
fall to police and which to educators. The number of students referred
to police since 2011 has declined by 62%, including the proportion of
Black students.
School
board president Kyla Armstrong-Romero, who also oversees Colorado’s
juvenile detention facilities, believes trained school resource officers
can help keep children out of the criminal justice system. However,
districts also need to hire diverse teachers and train staffers to try
to understand students from different backgrounds, she said.
Armstrong-Romero
said she was involved in the juvenile system as a Black student who
bounced between 14 schools, and she credits educators with helping her.
“I think it’s important that we capitalize on the roles that all those people play,” she said.
Former
Denver student Tiera Brown, 28, who supported the schools’ decision to
phase out officers, wonders if there would be more fellow Black students
in her University of Denver law class if they had been treated with
more understanding as teens.
She
was ticketed by police at school at 13 when she stood by a friend who
fought with a bully. Despite having good grades and winning academic
awards, she said she received in-school suspensions for things like
talking back to her teachers and was sent to a room that was like the
school jail.
“For
a lot of people who don’t have hope to begin with, what is it going to
do them? I think it just adds to the hopelessness,” she said.
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