LA County Supervisors Fret Over Phantom Threat of (*GASP*) Ice Cream Vendors


In the United States, it has probably never been safer to be a kid. There's no lead paint on the wall, fun metal slides have been replaced by scratched plastic crap that even wax paper can't get up to dangerous speed, and crimes against children have plummeted.
So why is Los Angeles County fretting over an infestation of pervy, Aqualung-ish ice cream vendors?
Yesterday, the Board of Supervisors approved a motion pushing for background checks on business license "applicants whose businesses regularly interact with children." The motion specifically singles out peddlers of creamsicles and other cold, sweet treats as nefarious threats to the innocent youth. That, despite a lack of evidence that innocent youths face much of a threat at all—and the dangers posed by background checks themselves.
The motion by Supervisor Don Knabe (PDF) reads, in part:
We should carefully scrutinize the background of any individual who engages in a child-oriented business to see if he or she has been convicted of crimes against children such as molestation, pornography, abuse, or is a registered sex offender.
Ice cream truck vendors are a prime example of someone that operates a business that caters to children as their primary clientele, or at the very least provides them with direct access to children who may not be in the company of an adult.
The dread scourge of ice cream vendors?
Knabe proposes that shifty-eyed would-be retailers of frozen confections be run through Live Scan—electronic fingerprinting—and checked against police and FBI criminal records.
So what's the harm if it will save just one child from some would-be Mister Pervee?
Well…Criminal background checks aren't perfect tools. Really, they're as fallible as any database, especially those run by government employees. Last year, the National Employment Law Project noted (PDF) that the FBI isn't so diligent about keeping its records current; about half of records are missing final disposition information. That means they reflect an arrest, but not whether a conviction resulted. As a result of such flaws, "more than 600,000 workers a year were potentially prejudiced in a job search as a result of the FBI's failure to report accurate and complete information."
So, if LA County starts running background checks on everybody who gets near a kid, there's a good chance that more than a few of them will be denied an opportunity to make a living for no good reason. They'll also be tainted as dangers to children.
All this, even as the Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that "the overall rate of serious violent crime against youth ages 12 to 17 declined 77 percent from 1994 to 2010." If you share Supervisor Knabe's specific concerns about sex offenders, it's worth knowing that "the rate of rape and sexual assault declined 68 percent."
Fortunately, Knabe and company made the usual political move by publicly announcing their concerns, and then skating the proposal off for review by the Treasurer, Tax Collector, and County Counsel.
Maybe it'll stay frozen in bureaucratic limbo.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Los Angeles is doing the best it can to remove the scourge of unfettered commerce in that fair city.
Los Angeles is doing the best it can to remove the scourge of unfettered commerce in that fair city.
FTFY.
In fairness, ice cream trucks are fucking creepy.
So if the operator of an ice cream truck dresses up as a clown would it create a creepy singularity?
If that clown had the face of Cillian Murphy, then yes.
When I worked late one night last summer, I was walking my dogs through the neighborhood around midnight and I saw an ice cream truck drive by in the dark with no lights or music on. It was the single scariest thing I've ever seen. I expected some creepy old lady with razor teeth to jump out and tell me my baby was gonna burn. The only thing that could've made it creepier is if the lights and music had been on.
More sand in the gears of our economy. They're striving to make us into Greece (or Italy, or...) and they're doing a great job of it.
I'm your ice cream man
Stop me when I'm passin' by...
All the while in hellish Yuma, AZ nefarious ice cream peddlers ply their vile trade, preying on the young with only a simple business license to hold the monsters in check.
We should carefully scrutinize the background of any individual who engages in a child-oriented business
Since legislators do everything "for the children", wouldn't this cover them?
^THIS!^
fun metal slides have been replaced by scratched plastic crap that even wax paper can't get up to dangerous speed
Excellent, J.D. A metaphor for our times.
How about shutting down all the government-run schools? They seem a lot more dangerous to children.
Again, we need a statute for the summary execution of any pol who uses the words "children", "safety", or "fairness" in connection with policy. From those words come legislative monsters.
And, of course, the name of this legislation will be "The Fairness in Safety for Children Act".
OK thats like the craziest thing I heard all day man.
http://www.myAnon.tk
Aqualung-ish ice cream vendors? Wow. I was rewatching EVERYBODY LOVES RAYMOND and they referenced Bungle in the Jungle. That's TWO Jethro Tull references in a single week!
Time for Tull to regroup and do a live album from Japan.