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Students at the nation's second largest school district will be shielded from prosecution and sent to administrators for low-level offenses as part of a sweeping reform of the way school police respond to bad behavior, Los Angeles Unified School District officials will announce Tuesday.

Rather than face arrest or citations for violations like possessing alcohol or marijuana on school property, students could be referred to off-site counseling centers or sent to the principal's office — a shift that activists, educators and justice officials say will prevent students, especially minorities, from becoming mired in the criminal justice system.

The change marks the latest rollback to the "zero tolerance" discipline policies that were instituted in the 1970s and 1980s and intensified in the wake of the Columbine school shooting. The trend away from strict punishments, seen in school districts from Oakland, California, to Broward County, Florida, gained ground in January when the Obama administration issued reforms that emphasized conflict resolution and classroom management over arrests and citations.

The sheer size of the Los Angeles district is what makes the move groundbreaking. With more than 640,000 students at nearly 1,100 schools and charter schools, Los Angeles is among the largest school districts whose police have adopted a policy of less punitive discipline.

"This is a huge breakthrough," said Zoe Rawson, a legal advocate with the Community Rights Campaign, a grass-roots organization that lobbied the school district police to adopt the reforms. Rather than face the "permanent hole" of the criminal justice system, Rawson said, "a guidance counselor will be there to sit down and be there with a young person and their family."

School board member Mónica García said the policy change was about being "appropriate" - and said offenses that are considered "category one" like brandishing a weapon or selling drugs don't fall under the policy changes.

Under the new policy, which is in place for the current school year, if a student is caught fighting, vandalizing school property or carrying alcohol, a school police officer must follow a step-by-step formula directing students to either on- or off-campus interventions. Previously, such offenses would send a student to court or probation.

Students possessing less than an ounce of marijuana will be sent to an off-site resource center. How to deal with repeat offenses isn't spelled out in the policy to give more latitude to officers and school officials.

"It's not like three times, then you go to the court," said Rawson, explaining that the new policy allows officers to help address the underlying needs of students.

"There's plenty of evidence we are tough. This is about changing behavior," García said. "We're acknowledging we have young people who need guidance and an opportunity to learn from their mistakes."

Scaling back officers' role in schools will eliminate racial disparities in student arrest rates, activists and educators said.

"It really is in low-income communities of color that we've seen this increase in law enforcement presence," said Ruth Cusick, an attorney with pro bono law firm Public Counsel who helped negotiate the policy changes with the district's police force.

Of the approximately 9,000 arrests and tickets issued to students in the 2011-2012 school year, 93 percent involved black and Latino students, according to data provided by the district to the Labor/Community Strategy Center.

According to district data from the 2013-14 school year, black students accounted for about 11 percent of Los Angeles' student population, but they made up about one-third of those suspended.

Los Angeles entered a voluntary agreement with the Department of Education in 2011 after an investigation concluded the district had carried out "inequitable and disproportionate" practices.

In recent years, the district has scaled back harsh punishments. In 2013, the district became the first in the nation to ban suspensions of defiant students. And in 2012, it began diverting truant students to counseling at off-site resource centers rather than issue tickets.

Jim Eichner, the managing director of programs for Washington, D.C.-based civil rights group Advancement Project, praised the end of "excessively harsh discipline" for low-level misconduct.

"Disruptive behavior is sometimes par for the course for students who are learning to behave properly," Eichner said.

Regarding criticism that educators are going soft on unruly students, Eichner said the types of treatment students undergo at school or off-site centers are effective and challenging.

"More restorative practices — that's actually really being tough on kids because it makes kids face up to their behavior," Eichner said.


Really now?
Zero Tolerance has never worked.
ever.

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best news all day

No Sweetheart

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Finally, someone sees how stupid zero tolerance is and tries to get away from it. Hopefully more schools follow this example.

Original Rogue

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I like this idea. Why wasn't it done before?

Feral Nymph

I'm not against scaling back zero tolerance policies. Suspending kids for gun-shaped poptarts and carrying tylenol is ludicious, but...

xdivision_whitey

Rather than face arrest or citations for violations like possessing alcohol or marijuana on school property, students could be referred to off-site counseling centers or sent to the principal's office


Minors in possession of alcohol and drugs is still illegal. So what exactly are they scaling back on? Reporting actual, albeit minor, crimes?

Dangerous Lunatic

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this looks like its gonna backfire badly, put to much pressure to to a water balloon & it will explode.

Wintry Dragon

What would they call it next? 1% tolerance? 10%? xd

Quotable Informer

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Pessimist
I'm not against scaling back zero tolerance policies. Suspending kids for gun-shaped poptarts and carrying tylenol is ludicious, but...

xdivision_whitey

Rather than face arrest or citations for violations like possessing alcohol or marijuana on school property, students could be referred to off-site counseling centers or sent to the principal's office


Minors in possession of alcohol and drugs is still illegal. So what exactly are they scaling back on? Reporting actual, albeit minor, crimes?
That's what I was thinking. Pop tart gun, Being a smart a** to the teacher should equal a talking to. Passing out Drugs, Bringing weapons shouldn't be tolerated and should be dealth with the "zero tolerance" unless it's a kid turn the item in like a good boy/girl.

Demonic Kitten

xdivision_whitey
Pessimist
I'm not against scaling back zero tolerance policies. Suspending kids for gun-shaped poptarts and carrying tylenol is ludicious, but...

xdivision_whitey

Rather than face arrest or citations for violations like possessing alcohol or marijuana on school property, students could be referred to off-site counseling centers or sent to the principal's office


Minors in possession of alcohol and drugs is still illegal. So what exactly are they scaling back on? Reporting actual, albeit minor, crimes?
That's what I was thinking. Pop tart gun, Being a smart a** to the teacher should equal a talking to. Passing out Drugs, Bringing weapons shouldn't be tolerated and should be dealth with the "zero tolerance" unless it's a kid turn the item in like a good boy/girl.

It's a big change for a school to act reasonably towards offenses and antics commited by students. You can't expect them to get it right immediately. It takes a while to balance out common sense. May not have much to do with the current subject, but I still remember how crowded the detention room got back in high school. They moved to the cafeteria an still were jammed packed and to move some to tutoring classes to have room for everyone. Drawing in art class, falling on the bus, raising your hand when the mentally disturbed teacher was going on her mood swing. Everyone from the deliquent to the teacher's pet got detention because of the paranoid principal and stictness of the school. It was actually the hangout place for us to chill with friends outside school hours because of how easy it was to get detention. You never had to try. Schools have little sense. This is showing some glimmer of promise. I'm still homeschooling my kids when I have them however. Even if their tolerance is improving in some areas, schools -especially around here -still provide very poor education unless you're rich enough for private school.

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I have zero tolerance for zero tolerance policies.

Snuggly Buddy

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Schools using common sense.
Imagine.
It's like some sort of retro throwback to when I was in school.

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