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Update: In the summer of 2020, as news about George Floyd’s death at the hands of police sparked a national reckoning with racism, communities across the country reacted by pulling police officers, often called school resource officers, from permanent assignment in school buildings. Our reporting at the time found that removing officers would not be enough to correct years of inequitable school discipline policies or sufficiently safeguard students of color, who are disproportionately referred to the criminal justice system for in-school offenses. A day after a jury found former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin guilty of murdering Floyd, our story has new relevance for the ongoing work of changing both practice and culture when it comes to police interactions with youth in schools.

Shyra Adams vividly remembers the days after the death of Tony Robinson, an unarmed Black teenager killed in 2015 by police in her hometown of Madison, Wisconsin.

Angry and distraught over the injustice, Adams, then a high school sophomore, staged a walkout with hundreds of other students, who filled the state Capitol to protest Robinson’s death. She joined weekly protests and helped organize sit-ins at her school. Then, she cried quietly in class as she watched the Dane County district attorney announce on TV that no charges would be filed against the officer who shot and killed Robinson.

“It felt kind of hopeless at that point,” Adams, now 21, said.

Shyra Adams stands outside James Madison Memorial High School in Madison, Wis. As a student there, Adams began organizing other youth activists to remove armed officers from the city’s schools; in June she celebrated the school board’s vote to end its contract with the local police department. Credit: AP Photo/Morry Gash

But this summer, after five years of testifying at nearly every Madison school board meeting about the importance of removing police from schools, Adams found herself crying for a different reason. This time, she said, the tears came from her renewed hope that fighting for young people of color could lead to change. In June, she and other members of the Freedom Youth Squad, a group of Black and Southeast Asian activists, gathered to watch the Madison school board’s unanimous vote to cancel its contract with municipal police and remove all officers stationed at its high schools.

“A lot of people in different states were winning, but I thought, ‘In Madison? No way. They’ve been ignoring us for years,’ ” Adams said. “But that’s changing now. We finally got the votes.”

Across the U.S., the death of George Floyd in police custody in May rekindled long-simmering debates over the role of school resource officers, as on-campus police are often called. Subsequent protests convinced dozens of school boards across the country to formally sever ties with local law enforcement, defund their internal police departments, or remove or reduce the presence of officers in schools. Big cities like Denver and Minneapolis, where Floyd died, have cut ties with police, as have school boards in smaller cities like Spokane, Washington; Ypsilanti, Michigan; and Salem, Massachusetts.

But even as activists like Adams celebrate these recent wins, many also now wonder: Once police physically leave a school, what’s to stop teachers and principals from calling 911 to get them back?

Recent research has tied the presence of police in schools to an uptick in student discipline, especially for children of color, and a decrease in graduation and college enrollment rates. And over the past few decades, educators have relied more and more on police to handle routine student discipline, with schools referring hundreds of thousands of students to law enforcement each year. But depending instead on officers outside the school system — who often have minimal training in how to work with children — may not end the overly harsh school discipline that activists have targeted.

“Yes, we eliminated the police department. But these [school] staff members, these teachers will still be calling the police on our Black students.”

Jasmine Williams, communications director, Black Organizing Project

This new dilemma has prompted some recognition among educators and policymakers that it will take more than changing schools’ relationships with police to rebuild trust with community and students. And to avoid falling back on calling 911 as the  default, teachers and students alike have called for renewed investments in other adults — like social workers and mental health counselors — that allow everyone on campus to feel safe.

“Yes, we eliminated the police department,” said Jasmine Williams, communications director for the Black Organizing Project, which led the fight to remove police from schools in Oakland, California. “But these [school] staff members, these teachers will still be calling the police on our Black students.”

Related: Protecting or policing?

In 2011, following the death of 20-year-old Raheim Brown at the hands of school police officers, Black community organizers in Oakland pledged to eliminate the school district’s police department. But it wasn’t until student-led March for Our Lives demonstrations this summer that the Oakland school board unanimously passed a resolution in June to disband its police department within six months.

Since the 2015-16 school year, teachers and staff at Oakland schools called the police more than 9,000 times, according to data included in the new resolution. Three out of four arrests made were of Black students, despite their representing just a quarter of overall enrollment in the district.

Black organizers in Oakland have anticipated that calls to 911 could become the default once the school district dissolves its police department by the end of this year. To head that off, they began asking teachers to sign a “Black Sanctuary Pledge” in 2018. So far, according to the Black Organizing Project, more than 300 out of 3,000 teachers union members have pledged not to call police on children for disciplinary issues, including school fights.

Oakland school staff have called the police approximately 9,000 times since the 2015-16 school year.

“We can’t demonize the people working with our students,” Williams said. “But we can hold them accountable.”

According to the most recent data available, teachers and school staff send thousands of classrooms’ worth of students to the police each school year. In 2017-18, school districts reported referring at least 221,000 students to law enforcement, with nearly two-thirds of those referrals for students of color. At least 51,000 of those incidents resulted in an arrest, according to a Hechinger Report analysis of federal data compiled by the Office for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Education.

And that’s almost certainly an undercount, said Dan Losen, director of the Center for Civil Rights Remedies at the University of California, Los Angeles, which focuses its research on the school-to-prison pipeline and racial inequity in special education.

school resource officers
Black youth and Black Lives Matter Seattle-King County lead a silent march of an estimated 60,000 people in June to show support for Black lives. Later that month, the Seattle school board voted to remove police officers from its schools. Credit: Neal Morton/The Hechinger Report

Both Losen’s detailed analysis of federal data on student referral and arrest rates in 2015-16 and a quick Hechinger analysis of the corresponding numbers in 2017-18 show that data collection for some large districts was either incomplete or entirely absent. New York City, for example, which enrolls more than a million students, appears to have zero school-based arrests, which can’t be true, Losen said. The Every Student Succeeds Act, passed in 2015, requires states to report school-policing data, but, according to Losen’s research, not one state had met that obligation by July 2020.

Related: No longer ruled out: an educator develops strategies to keep court-involved students in school

Regardless of the missing or incomplete data, local news headlines make clear that police are frequently called to schools.

In Seattle, a white teacher called 911, saying a Black fifth grade boy threatened to beat her up, The Seattle Times reported in 2019. She didn’t press charges.

In Texas’ Round Rock Independent School District, an assistant high school principal called the police on three students for taking animal crackers and pretzels from a teachers lounge in 2018, according to local media reports. An officer investigated and charged each student with theft.

Tiffanie Harrison, a teacher in the district, refers to the incident as “Animal Cracker Gate.” And it — along with video footage from 2015 of a police officer grabbing a student by the throat in a nearby high school  — helped convince her to run for the school board.  She won a seat this November, and plans to question why the school district chose this year to start a new police department at the cost of $1.7 million.

“Quite frankly, we don’t need police in schools,” Harrison said. “We can call if we have an emergency.”

“There shouldn’t be laws on the books that allow officers to write citations for immaturity.”

Jeffrey Yarbrough, chief of police, Round Rock Independent School District

Jeffrey Yarbrough, the first chief of police there, said he’s encountered educators who ask officers to issue citations for infractions he wishes they would handle on their own, like disrupting a class, talking too loudly or wearing too much perfume.

“That’s insane to me,” Yarbrough said. “There shouldn’t be laws on the books that allow officers to write citations for immaturity.”

Still, he argues that having one law enforcement agency focused on dealing with kids and hiring specially trained school-based officers will be better than leaving to chance who shows up when teachers or school staff call 911.

“Even if you don’t have law enforcement on your campus, you’re going to have to have a law enforcement presence to deal with certain offenses,” he said. Without on-campus police, “who’s coming and how they will respond to juveniles is a crapshoot every time.”

Los Angeles — now home to the nation’s largest independent school police force — first assigned officers to patrol schools in 1948 as civil rights leaders dismantled formal segregation in neighborhoods and schools. About a decade later, Oakland followed suit for similar reasons: Black Southerners were moving to the city, and under pressure to desegregate schools, the district created its internal police department in 1957.

Other districts followed suit. By the early 1970s, often amid racial anxieties, urban school districts in 40 states had some form of police within their schools, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

“As a result, youth of color were policed in neighborhoods, in bodegas, in housing project stairwells and now, in classrooms,” the ACLU wrote in a 2017 report.

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This story also appeared in HuffPost

Dozens of school boards across the U.S. have voted to end or reduce the presence of police in schools since the police killing of George Floyd in May 2020.

Dozens of school boards across the U.S. have voted to end or reduce the presence of police in schools since the police killing of George Floyd in May 2020.

In recent decades, several high-profile mass shootings, including the Columbine High School massacre in Colorado in 1999, have fueled national attention to school safety and increased interest in policing on campus. Federal grants, such as the “COPS in Schools” program, helped place thousands of officers in schools, with the number of school resource officers topping 46,000 in 2007-08. As of 2017-18, just about half of all public schools in the U.S. reported having at least one sworn law enforcement officer on campus.

Related: Almost two decades after Columbine, how to prevent school shootings still vexes security experts

school resource officers
In this April 17, 2019, file photo, a patrol car is parked in front of Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., where two students killed 12 classmates and a teacher in 1999. High-profile mass shootings like the one at Columbine have fueled national attention to school safety in recent years and increased interest in policing on campus. Credit: AP Photo/Joe Mahoney

And once police officers are in the building, teachers and principals start to rely on them to handle misbehavior, not just violence, said Emily Mooney, a policy fellow with the R Street Institute, a think tank in Washington, D.C.

School police “are often increasingly serving that role as school disciplinarian,” she said. “That’s not the role they were trained to do. It is too much to ask … and certainly can conflict with their ultimate mandate of enforcing the law.”

In a white paper she co-authored this year, Mooney cited research that connected officers hired through the federal “COPS in Schools” program to a reduction — about 1 percent to 2 percent — in disruptive criminal incidents on campus. But she and co-author Nila Bala also cited research linking greater federal funding of police in Texas schools to increased discipline rates in middle school, particularly for low-income, Black and Latino students. Another study found that schools where students have regular contact with officers were more likely to refer children to law enforcement for fighting, making threats without a weapon, stealing or vandalism.

“In a bygone era, many of these behavioral issues were handled by schools,” Bala and Mooney wrote, “but there has been a cultural shift in how to handle disciplinary issues to the current context in which there is a strong reliance on law enforcement.”

Activists worry that eliminating school police will not eliminate police in schools, because teachers have come to rely on law enforcement officers to administer discipline. They say “policing” student behavior will continue in schools unless and until teachers and staff have better ways of maintaining safe, smoothly operating campuses.

“That’s the point of us taking police out of schools: End that school-to-prison pipeline.”

Shyra Adams, youth activist

In the meantime, relying on police has become so ingrained in some places that not even a pandemic has been enough to stop it. In Colorado Springs, Colorado, a teacher called local law enforcement on a seventh grader who waved a toy gun during an online art class in August 2020. In Suffolk County, New York, this year, a high school student who showed up in person on a remote day to protest hybrid learning was first suspended, then arrested after he returned later in the week.

Adams, the activist who started pushing to remove police from schools as a teenager in Wisconsin, said more school resources should be aimed at helping students, not disciplining them.

“We want teachers and school officials to be held accountable when they still call the cops on youth,” she said. “That’s the point of us taking police out of schools: End that school-to-prison pipeline.”

Shyra Adams, second from left, and members of the Freedom Youth Squad painted “Police free schools” on the road in front of the Madison Metropolitan School District administrative building in June. For five years, Adams testified at meetings of the school board in an effort to have armed officers removed from Madison, Wis., high schools. Credit: Shyra Adams/Freedom Inc.

She and other members of  the Freedom Youth Squad plan to soon introduce a proposal for a community oversight board — similar to those in police departments — in Madison that would review any incident that ends in a call to police. It remains unclear what powers the board would have if it finds an educator called 911 inappropriately, but students involved in the incident could access legal services if needed.

Related: ‘Kids who have less, need more’: The fight over school funding

Other communities have tried similar measures. In 2014, following a lawsuit filed by families of students with disabilities, New York City agreed in a settlement to stop schools from using 911 as a disciplinary measure. But it didn’t work, said Nelson Mar, an attorney with Legal Services NYC, which represented students in the lawsuit.

“Unfortunately, the calls went up,” Mar said. “The regulation says [school staff] must call 911 if they feel someone’s life is in danger, that there could be imminent bodily harm, and there’s a lot of leeway in that.”

“This is a state of emergency for our Black students, but together, we can do what’s right.”

Kampala Taiz-Rancifer, chair, Oakland teachers union’s Black Women’s Caucus

More recently, the Republican-controlled Texas Legislature overwhelmingly passed a state law last year that prohibits school districts from assigning officers the duties of “routine student discipline or school administrative tasks.” The bill’s author, a Democratic state senator, specifically noted the lack of clarity around officers’ role on campus aside from emergency situations; as a result, they participate in routine disciplinary procedures that can escalate, which is especially dangerous for students of color and students with disabilities.

Still, the law amounts to little more than a statement, said Andrew Hairston, director of the School-to-Prison Pipeline Project at the advocacy group Texas Appleseed.

“There’s no teeth to it. There’s no way to really enforce it,” Hairston said. “There’s no czar from the [state education agency] going around the districts to make sure police are not engaging in student discipline practices. Who’s going to stop them?”

“This is a state of emergency for our Black students, but together, we can do what’s right.” Kampala Taiz-Rancifer, chair, Oakland teachers union’s Black Women’s Caucus

school resource officers
Shyra Adams, center, leads a June protest to remove police from schools in Madison, Wis. Adams joined other youth activists in that fight following the 2015 death of Tony Robinson, an unarmed Black teenager killed by police in her city. Credit: Shyra Adams/Freedom Inc.

In Madison and Oakland, meanwhile, organizers have moved beyond just thinking about police. They now want to funnel the money that would have paid armed officers into hiring social workers, mental health counselors and other adults who could help defuse tensions in the classroom — an acknowledgment that, without those supports in school, teachers might feel they have no other option than to call 911.

The Black Organizing Project, for example, has proposed spending some of the $2.3 million saved by dismantling the Oakland district’s police force on training school staff in restorative justice and trauma-informed care. Restorative justice is a process that helps people understand the harm they have caused through a moderated conversation with those they harmed and make amends for it. A 2019 review of the early research on schools that use restorative justice suggests it can help decrease fighting, bullying, suspensions and racial disparities in discipline.

Kampala Taiz-Rancifer, chair of the Oakland teachers union’s Black Women’s Caucus, has been urging her district’s leaders to reinvest the money saved by cutting ties with police.

“We need to create a really different environment for our kids,” she said.

At an October meeting of the Oakland school board, she offered a menu of solutions — hiring more Black educators, offering ethnic studies in school, increasing family engagement — that she said would improve student outcomes, especially for young men of color.

“This is a state of emergency for our Black students,” she told the board members, “but together, we can do what’s right.”

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6 Letters

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  1. My wife taught in a rural county-wide high school for 30 years. This school had a mixed student population, mixed in every sense of the word. Violent behavior was rife, up to and including murder and assaults with deadly weapons. Robberies and thefts were common, and my wife was occasionally the victim. Police officers were commonly called, but NOT(!!!) on account of race. However, it’s true that Black students were disproportionately responsible for criminal activity. The point is — the focus should be on the nature of the behavior that results in the police call, not the skin color of the student. Teachers are simply not equipped to deal with knife attacks, shootings, drug usage, sexual assaults, and similar behavior. The fact that the behavior is exhibited by Black students in greater proportion makes no difference whatsoever.

  2. “In a bygone era, many of these behavioral issues were handled by schools,” Bala and Mooney wrote, “but there has been a cultural shift in how to handle disciplinary issues to the current context in which there is a strong reliance on law enforcement.”

    The cultural shift no one will discuss. What are parents/guardians teaching their children? Where is the courtesy, respect, politeness, kindness, obedience, and purpose? These ‘children’ are in school for an education. Disruptive, abusive, flamboyant, and assaultive behavior seriously inhibits the educational process.

    This article is focused on the police officer and completely missed the entire issue of cultural decay present in society. The principal, once upon a time, had control of the students with the support of the parent(s). No longer do parents support the educators and correct childish misbehavior. Johnny can do no wrong in mama’s eyes. So, of course the principal is going to call the police. She has to when mama’s is now threatening to whoop her for suggesting Johnny isn’t the perfect angel she knows.

    Your insinuation that law enforcement is biased without context is reprehensible.

  3. The color of someones skin is not the reason why they get shot and people need to get that straight. If you live in a predominately black community you can’t say that someone got shot because they were black. If it were a mostly white community and a white person got shot it’s the same thing. Race has nothing to do with it. It is very important to keep officers in schools because it shows kids that the police are nothing to be afraid of which is important. Kids these days get told be their parents that officers are bad and will shoot you just because you’re black, which is not true at all. This allows kids to see that they’re the good guys like they should be and it might even give them the chance to be properly taught what to do if you’re stopped by the police. Police in school make a major positive impact by lowering the amount of drugs and violence on school grounds. It also give kids a change to talk to the about a problem they might be having if they don’t want to talk to their parents about it.

  4. Schools let me be physically and sexually assaulted without ever involving the police. This was before there were any resource officers in schools. There were problem kids who had well known patterns of bullying, intimidation, and physical violence, and I only remember the schools thinking they would “handle it” themselves. One kid, who ended up assaulting me in a park after school, had previously “got in a fight” with another friend of mine a few weeks earlier. By “got in a fight”, I mean he had hit the guy with a skateboard and was caught when he had the guy pinned to the ground with the skateboard pressed into his neck. Why the F wouldn’t you call the police for that? In any other part of the country, that is assault and battery and the person would go to jail (court, at least). For some reason on school campuses, teachers think they’re the law and decide a 3 day suspension is enough. Again, WTF. That’s leaving kids to the mercy of predators, and me and thousands of other kids have paid the price. It wasn’t even the first, or sadly, the last time it happened. It happened ALL the time.
    You want schools to handle everything themselves, you’re going to actually, physically hurt thousands more kids. You should know that. Shame on you and anyone who supports it.

  5. This is a topic sure to raise a variety of viewpoints. It also raises other issues such as trauma informed schools, culturally relevant teaching practices, and schools connecting with families and communities. Some schools and school districts recognized years ago the practices they were using did not work and put in the time, effort, and training to become trauma informed or trauma sensitive schools. Videos that provide examples are: “A Schools Journey Toward Trauma Sensitivity” in MA, “Part two A Journey Towards Trauma Informed Schools” in Chicago, and “Stopping the Crisis: Oregon Teachers, Parents Consider Solutions to Stop Classroom Outbursts” in elementary schools. Next, the literature on culturally relevant teaching is extensive and has been around for decades but how many preservice teachers learn about it? Examples are “The Dreamkeepers: Successful Teachers of African American Children” by Ladson Billings and “Other People’s Children: Cultural Conflict in the Classroom” by Delpit. These are two examples of an extensive literature. If preservice teachers have little experience with children from diverse backgrounds and are not prepared to work in schools with diverse student bodies educational outcomes may suffer. Last, schools need to connect with families and communities. An example is the video “How One Woman Reinvented School to Combat Poverty” about school administrator Dr. Tiffany Anderson. This is only one example of how schools have chosen to connect with families and communities. How schools respond to the issues above is important.

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