New research finds that police deployed in schools, commonly called school resource officers (SROs), do not reduce school shootings, but do increase suspensions, expulsions, and arrests of students, reported Reason.
A working
paper published last week by the Annenberg Institute at Brown
University and written by researchers at the University at Albany, SUNY and
RAND Corporation bills itself as the broadest and most rigorous examination at
the school-level of how SROs impact student outcomes. Using national
school-level data from 2014 to 2018 collected by the U.S. Department of
Education, the paper found that while SROs "do effectively reduce some
forms of violence in schools," they do not prevent school shootings or
gun-related incidents.
"We also find that SROs intensify the use of
suspensions, expulsions, police referrals, and arrests of students,"
researchers wrote. "These effects are consistently over two times larger
for Black students than White students."
The study found that the introduction of SROs to
schools did appear to improve general safety and decrease non-gun-related
violence, like fights and physical assaults. However, the authors say, those
benefits come at the cost of increasing both school discipline and police
referrals.
The study further found that SROs increase chronic
absenteeism, especially for students with disabilities.
During the nationwide debate over policing last
year, school districts across the country began reconsidering the
use of SROs, and several major cities—Minneapolis, Denver, Seattle, Charlottesville,
and Portland,
Oregon—ended their SRO programs in public schools. Other jurisdictions
significantly cut their budgets for school policing.
The number of police in schools has skyrocketed in
schools over the past four decades, first in response to drugs, then mass
shootings. Police departments and organizations like the National Association
of School Resource Officers argue that well-trained SROs act as liaisons
between the school and police department. A good SRO, they argue, can actually
reduce arrests.
Civil liberties groups and disability advocates, on
the other hand, have long argued that increases in school police and
zero-tolerance policies for petty disturbances have fueled the
"school-to-prison" pipeline and led to disproportionate enforcement against
minorities and students with disabilities.
Other recent research has come to similar
conclusions as the new working paper. For example, a study published last
August by researchers at the University of Maryland and the firm Westat found that
increasing the number of police in schools doesn't make school safer and leads
to harsher discipline for infractions. The study found that increasing the
number of SROs led to both immediate and persistent increases in the number of
drug and weapon offenses and the number of exclusionary disciplinary actions
against students.
After Florida mandated that all K-12 schools have at
least one SRO or armed guardian following the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School, a study found that the number of school
arrests—which had been declining for years—suddenly
started to rise. There was also a sharp increase in the use of physical
restraint against students.
As Reason reported last
June, Florida civil liberties groups and disability advocates warned that the
hiring surge was leading to a disturbing number of arrests of children. The
research appeared to confirm at least some of their concerns. The study found
that the presence of SROs "predicted greater numbers of behavioral
incidents being reported to law enforcement, particularly for less severe
infractions and among middle schoolers."
While overall youth arrests in the state declined by
12 percent, the number of youth arrests at school increased 8 percent. Florida
police arrested elementary-aged children 345 times during the 2018–2019 school
year, the study reported. It also found four times as many incidents of
physical restraint in 2018–2019 as there were in the previous year.
Florida has also been the site of several recent
viral videos of small children being arrested. Last year, body camera
footage emerged showing
officers in Key West, Florida, trying and failing to handcuff an 8-year-old
boy, whose wrists were too small for the cuffs. An Orlando SRO made headlines
last September when he arrested a
6-year-old girl.
Such viral incidents have sparked national outrage
and calls for SRO programs to be curtailed. Chicago activists who want to
defund the school system's police program have cited a 2019 video in
which Chicago police officers kick, punch, and taser a 16-year-old girl. The
Justice Department's 2017 report on civil liberties abuses by the Chicago
Police Department included
findings that officers beat and tasered teenagers in school for
non-criminal conduct and minor violations.
Just yesterday, Hawaii News Now reported
on a 10-year-old girl who was handcuffed
and arrested for drawing an offensive picture that upset another
student's parent.
Earlier this year, the city of Rochester, New York,
released body camera footage of officers pepper
spraying a handcuffed 9-year-old girl.
A North Carolina mother filed
a civil rights lawsuit last October against a policeman who handcuffed
and held her autistic 7-year-old son prone on the ground for nearly 40 minutes.
The list could go on and on: a school resource
officer at a high school in Camden, Arkansas, was relieved of duty after video showed
him putting a student in a chokehold and lifting the student off the ground. A
North Carolina SRO was fired after
he brutally body-slammed a middle-schooler. A Broward County sheriff's deputy
in Florida was arrested
and charged with child abuse after a video showed him body-slamming a
15-year-old girl at a special needs school.
In response to incidents like these, legislators in
states around the country have been introducing
legislation to raise the minimum age at which children can be
arrested.
The authors of the new working paper say that school
districts should weigh the benefits of safer hallways against the high cost of
putting more kids in contact with the criminal justice system.
"The results of this study present a difficult
set of tradeoffs," researchers conclude. "Although our study does not
perform a cost-benefit analysis, we encourage districts to consider these
effects of SROs in comparison to other potential investments to prevent
violence in schools, including restorative practices."
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