Weekend Herald

Students to get pat- down search at ball

Civil liberties organisati­on says school’s plans ‘ over the top’

- Ophelia Buckleton

An Auckland high school plans to enforce pat- down searches of pupils arriving for the school ball — a move that puts it on a collision course with the Ministry of Education.

Mt Albert Grammar School also intends to use a sniffer dog and randomly breath test students at the July 6 ball at the Pullman Hotel.

In a letter to parents, acting head- master Paul McKinley said: “All students will be checked by security guards by pat down on arrival.”

McKinley told the Weekend Herald the measures were “nothing new” and that the patting down of students at school balls had been employed in previous years.

“It’s all about making sure it’s a safe night for the students and it’s an enjoyable night. When you have around 450 students there, the care of their safety is really critical,” he said.

“Our community is very supportive of what we do.”

McKinley said he would be surprised if other schools didn’t use patdown searches at their balls.

ACG Parnell College has informed parents of plans to use a sniffer dog and testing agency to check students for drugs and alcohol at its ball in July.

The Ministry of Education deputy secretary sector enablement and support, Katrina Casey, said search and surrender guidelines “state clearly that patting down i s not allowed”. “Visual assessment at entry of students’ condition and behaviour may occur and entry can be refused based on a judgment about a student’s condition.”

Casey said the ministry’s responsibi­lity was to ensure school leaders were aware of the guidelines and did not expose themselves to a legal battle.

The ministry’s guidelines stated outside venues may have their own rules around entry to a function, on their premises, however, “schools are not permitted to conduct a search that involves searching a student’s person/ body”.

A spokeswoma­n for the Pullman Hotel told the Weekend Herald the venue did not enforce pat- down searches in its ball contract with schools.

McKinley said staff from the Pullman Hotel would conduct the pat down, not staff from the school.

He said he would relook at the school’s contract with the Pullman Hotel but, as far as he was aware, the school was entitled to have security guards pat down students.

When students arrive at the ball, they form two queues — males on one side and females on the other — so they can be patted down by “profession­als” of the same gender.

Any students who failed any checks during the evening would be asked to have a parent or caregiver collect them, according to the letter.

New Zealand Council of Civil Liberties’ spokesman Thomas Beagle said patting down students seemed “over the top”.

“One question we want to ask is ‘ Would we accept schools having pat down searches at the school gate each day’ and I think the answer to that is, that would be obviously ludicrous and wouldn’t be acceptable.

“It’s a state institutio­n doing an unwarrante­d and untargeted search.

“To my mind, you have to have some really strong reason to justify even looking at such measures.”

Beagle said Kiwis were protected from unreasonab­le search under the Bill of Rights Act. Secondary Principals’ Associatio­n ( SPANZ) president Michael Williams said he was aware that schools could not conduct random or invasive searches of students.

However, the ability for a venue to require pat downs was a “bit of a loophole”.

“The thing that is paramount here from the school’s perspectiv­e is to ensure the students are safe,” he said.

“[ SPANZ] applaud principals who take their job seriously and ensure the safety of their students but we also assure that our members adhere to the legal requiremen­ts.”

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