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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Group Opposes Zero-Tolerance School Policies
Title:US CA: Group Opposes Zero-Tolerance School Policies
Published On:2001-02-20
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-02 02:03:46
GROUP OPPOSES ZERO-TOLERANCE SCHOOL POLICIES

Discipline: American Bar Assn. resolution says that such rules for alcohol,
drugs and weapons violate students' due process rights.

SAN DIEGO--The American Bar Assn. on Monday approved by a resounding margin
a resolution opposing zero-tolerance policies in schools.

School districts across the country have adopted such policies, with
mandatory expulsions or suspensions for alcohol, drug and weapons offenses
by students.

Michael Johnson, chairman of the bar association's criminal justice
section, said he hopes the resolution will spur Congress to enact
legislation encouraging local school boards to do away with the
controversial policies.

In recent years, some districts have softened their policies after
concluding that the punishments were too harsh for relatively minor
infractions or for mistaken ones.

The bar association says such policies violate students' due process rights
by requiring automatic punishment regardless of circumstances, said
Johnson, a prosecutor in Merrimack County, N.H.

Noting that the policies are popular in some communities where parents and
the public fear for the safety of children in school, Johnson said that
"the demands of society to be safe can be satisfied by making our system
more responsive, not less human."

The resolution, approved in a 337-28 vote, urges schools to maintain strong
policies against gun possession but ensure that students' rights are
protected when they are being disciplined.

The bar association took up the issue after a number of high-profile cases,
such as the 13-year-old from Denton County, Texas, who was assigned to
write a scary Halloween story and spent six days in jail for writing about
shooting up a school.

The resolution says that zero-tolerance policies are increasingly
unnecessary, since crime has been declining on public school campuses since
1990. Robert Schwartz, executive director of the Juvenile Law Center in
Philadelphia, noted that although they are supposed to punish all students
equally, zero-tolerance policies have disproportionately affected blacks
and Latinos.

"Does the ABA carry any weight? I don't know," Johnson said. "But standing
by while injustice is being done is not responsible."

The bar association is the largest professional membership organization in
the world, with more than 400,000 members. Other ABA resolutions passed
Monday include:

* Supporting a review of the nature and cause of voting problems in the
2000 presidential election.

*Opposing the use of secret evidence in immigration proceedings.

*Calling for unaccompanied immigrant children to have lawyers appointed for
them at government expense during all stages of immigration proceedings.
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