Kids Are Back in Schools. Cops Shouldn't Be.
Police are being asked to handle kids broken by failures of public schooling.

It's no secret that bad policy all too often breeds more bad policy. After two years of pandemic-related disruptions to public schooling and the lives of the students that attend them, kids returning to classrooms are acting out in ways that weren't (but should have been) anticipated. As a consequence, the push to remove police officers from schools, where their presence often escalates conflict, has stalled and even reversed. With politicians putting cops back in schools to address disturbing behavior caused by earlier political decisions, we may be in for a new round of problems measured in harmed children.
Police were an unusual presence in schools when many of today's adults were growing up. "In the mid-1970s, police officers were in only about 1 percent of US schools," Livia Gershon noted in June 2020 for JSTOR Daily, a scholarly news publication. "That changed since the late 1990s, as school shooting incidents brought a wave of concern about safety. Today, 60 percent of schools have a police presence."
As with so many visitations from the Good Idea Fairy, the placement of police officers in schools got a nudge from a federal program. This one "supports safe schools by providing grant funds, technical assistance, and resources to help deploy school resource officers (SROs)." The result was subsidized disciplinary enforcement handed off to armed police officers trained to deal with dangerous criminals, and now applying their skills to mischievous, hot-headed, and sometimes troubled kids.
"I've seen cases where students got into a fight and the principal responded by offering conflict resolution, only to learn that the SRO decided to charge the participants with a crime," former public school superintendent Joshua P. Starr wrote for The Phi Delta Kappan in 2018. "I also know police commanders who privately express frustration with their local school leaders, accusing them of abusing their authority, ignoring police protocols, and ordering officers to intimidate and crack down on students they want to push out of the school," he added.
The human cost of interactions can be considerable when disciplinary incidents are escalated to police matters. In November 2021, school resource officers at Little Elm High School in suburban Dallas were captured on video tasing and pepper-spraying protesting students. In 2019, Douglas County, Colorado, school resource officers arrested and handcuffed an autistic 11-year-old boy, and then confined him in a patrol car for two hours, after he scratched a classmate with a pencil (his parents had to post a $25,000 bond for his release). The Kenton County, Kentucky, Sheriff's Department paid out a six-figure settlement in 2018 after Deputy Kevin Sumner, working as a school resource officer, handcuffed an eight-year-old boy and a nine-year-old girl.
"These are very young children, and their conduct does not call to mind the type of 'assault' which would warrant criminal prosecution," wrote U.S. District Judge William O. Bertelsman in his 2017 ruling for the plaintiffs. "The method of handcuffing that Sumner employed leads this Court to conclude that his actions were unreasonable and constituted excessive force as a matter of law."
Unfortunately, much the same could be said of entirely too much SRO conduct, as suggested by Starr. As a result, schools began moving away from their use in a shift accelerated by the protests against police brutality spurred by the murder of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer. But those protests were fueled and rendered more violent than they might have otherwise been not just by fury over police brutality, but also by the social distancing, frustration, and economic disruption of pandemic lockdowns. These measures had their parallels in the school closures that isolated kids, far from friends and the normal patterns of life.
"School closures were intended to keep students safe during the pandemic, but for many, it's ushered in a different set of dangers: anxiety, depression and other serious mental health conditions," EdSource found as early as May 2020.
"Reuters surveyed school districts nationwide in February to assess the mental health impacts of full or partial school shutdowns," the news service reported last year. "Of the 74 districts that responded, 74% reported multiple indicators of increased mental health stresses among students. More than half reported rises in mental health referrals and counseling."
That is, after years of failing to adequately educate students, of implementing politicized curricula, and of handing discipline off to cops with handcuffs, public schools essentially abandoned kids in a time of crisis. The result was a lot of broken children who started acting out once they returned to the classroom.
"Schools across the country say they're seeing an uptick in disruptive behaviors," Chalkbeat's Kalyn Belsha noted in a September 2021 story about the return to in-person lessons. "Some are obvious and visible, like students trashing bathrooms, fighting over social media posts, or running out of classrooms. Others are quieter calls for help, like students putting their head down and refusing to talk."
"The behavior issues are a reflection of the stress the pandemic placed on children, experts say, upending their education, schedules, and social lives," Belsha added.
You can see what's coming next, right? After all, why should government institutions try something new when a failed old approach is just waiting to be readopted?
"Crime spikes force schools to reinstate resource officers as defund movement collapses," Fox News trumpeted last month in a law-and-order happy-dance. Among the districts signing off on cops in schools are Alexandria, Virginia, Columbus, Ohio, Fabens Independent School District in Texas, and Pomona Unified School District in California. Montgomery County, Maryland, is poised to do the same.
So, police officers who were removed from schools because of violent interactions with students are being placed back in classrooms because of a rise in violent behavior among kids directly attributable to those institutions' failures, and they're somehow expected to reduce the conflict. It's official mismanagement all the way down, feeding on its own inadequacy and spurring itself to greater depths of disaster, with the cost to be measured in the harm done to children.
We've come to expect government agencies to double down on bad policy rather than admit error, but they go too far when they victimize kids. If the public schools can't get a handle on properly educating children, we should at least be able to expect them to refrain from abuse.
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"Kids Are Back in Schools. Cops Shouldn't Be."
Indeed. We Koch / Reason libertarians despise cops. Like our progressive allies, we view them as racist psychopaths who terrorize Black and Brown bodies.
#AbolishThePolice
#(ExceptTheCapitolPolice)
public schools essentially abandoned kids in a time of crisis. The result was a lot of broken children who started acting out once they returned to the classroom.
Obviously the solution is to mandate that, during a crisis, each kid hang out with their best friend while maintaining social distance and wearing masks.
When I was in school cops were only called when someone had a weapon or OD'd.
^This^
My 4 years in high school, cops were only called once, and that was when a teacher was maced.
(not the medieval kind)
I managed to get through Jr and Sr high without cops ever being called. Granted it was a smaller school, but still. That's not to say there are never issues for police to address in schools, but the normalization of "security" and constant interfacing with law enforcement in their official capacity is extremely concerning.
In grade school the only times we ever sw cops at the school was the once a year in the spring day when the local city cops showed up with a patrol car, parked it on the blactop prt of the play yard, and each class as called out one at a time. First the cop stood up front and chatted wiht us for a time, told us about himself, and the kinds of things he has to do on daily basis. Questions were welcomed when he was done.."how many speeders did yu catch last week?" was a favourite. Then we all marched out (yes, in formation and in step) to see his patrol car, and he alwasys lit off the siren, which was the "funnest" part for us boys.
That was IT. Fire department did the same, at about the same time of year. At younger ages, we were always admonished to MEMORISE our full name, address, and home phone number. Which n one town was always easier, because weonl had one "exchamge".
In the early 90s I was cited every time I got in a fight at school. We had plain clothed no weapon officers at all times. They wouldnt issue the ticket though. The cop would show up later in the day or to my house and ticket me for disorderly conduct. NBD, that's life.
"NBD, that's life under fascism."
Fixed it for you.
Yeah, modern culture and families aren't the problem, it's the schools fault.
What the H do you think is rooted in the schools and is being "taught" there? F'ing Statist shill.
Yep, no such thing as parents, or Mother and Father, family. All children are orphans and considered ADD bipolar wards of the state. All children need a therapist, a caseworker and medication from the social worker/big pharmaceutical industrial complex to get through life cradle to grave.
This has nothing to do with government. Oh what a brave new world.
No cops in my high school. Then again, my high school was one of the last in the entire state to have an "open" campus. Students could leave any time they wanted. Technically you needed a hall pass, but few bothered and no one checked. We had part time jobs to go to, often as part of our curriculum. Gosh, job training with real jobs as part of high school! If you had grades good enough you didn't even need a hall pass. So sometimes I would just head across the street to the drive-in diner for an afternoon burger. No big deal. 16, 17, and 18 year old students were treated as the mostly adults that they were.
Then I came back ten years later. Actually lived across from the school. No longer open, it was closed with an eight foot steel fence. Not a mesh fence either, but a fake wrought iron thing that was supposed to look aesthetic but actually made the place look like a minimum security prison.
Today they it has permanent cops assigned to it.
No crime that I am aware of, just the same minor miscreant behavior that was always there (smoking behind the bleachers, some pot dealing behind the shop, etc).
I weep for our civilization.
Cops aren't needed in schools full time.
Arm the teachers and call the cops when a kid commits a crime.
Common sense.
Too many teachers are douchebags. Bad idea.
It's no secret that bad policy all too often breeds more bad policy.
Haaaaa ha ha ha! There is no such thing as bad policy. There is only bad intentions. Policy is created with good intentions, so when things go awry it's because of someone else with bad intentions. The natural solution is more policy backed with good intentions to root out the bad intentions. Wash, rinse, repeat.
broken by failures of public schooling.
And by dissolute parents and their chaotic lifestyles.
Over a decade ago, long before the Plague of Death Covid PANDEMIC certain districts could not hire teachers. See Harrisburg Pa. violent, a few abusive and out of control 8-9 year olds and teens. I suspect the teachers unions want the cops to protect them from a few of the kids or gang violence.
The logic in this article is dumb
The first priority is to protect non-violent students, from violent ones. Violent students do not belong in K-12. And, handcuffing or pepper spraying violent students is not wrong. It's necessary.
Look at the case of the Autistic boy they commented on - he assaulted another child with a pencil. That can lead to severe damage. If that child cannot handle themselves in K-12, they don't belong there.
No child should suffer violence from other children. Their mental state is no excuse.
I hope you don't have any children.
Good to see JD defending the libertarian right to assault others. No wonder he was so on board with the peaceful protests and their related assaults, arson and general destruction.
J D Tuccille.. you said this:
"the murder of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer."
LEASE get this right... Mr. Floyd was NOT "murdered" by those police officers. He murderedhimself by wilfully ingesting a four times lethal dose of illegal fantanyl, along with twice lethal dose of meth. The combination is what ended his life. He'd pulled this stunt before, swallowing the fent, but the aid car got there in time to inject the antidote and thus he was "saved" only to manage success his next attempt.
PLEASE get this right. If Officer cChauvin and company had not been able to locate the suspect/object of their call, he'd ahve died wihtin a few minutes of the same time anyway, slumped over the steering wheel of his car, his "friends" most likleky having bailed on him.
the solution is simple: parents who do not want their kids in a school where the cops are playing hardball and calling the shots need to take their kids OUT of that school. Private school, charter schooll,s aor, the best, homeschool. If enough folks did this, the schools would go bust finaincially because they'd not have enough butts on benches to carry the freight of keeping the place open. THEN what would the unions do, with no emploiyment availbel for their minioins?
Police are trained, one hopes, to deal with adult law breakers. Dealing with school kids is another story, one requiring different training, training that police officers do not have.