The Denver Post

Students of color push back on calls for police in schools

- By Annie Ma

After the mass shooting at a Texas elementary school, schools around the country pledged to boost security measures and increased the presence of law enforcemen­t on campus — partly to reassure parents and students.

But police inside schools can make some students more uneasy, not less. Especially for Black students and other students of color, their personal experience­s with policing can leave them feeling unsafe and alienated from school when they see officers on campus.

High school senior Malika Mobley has seen three different school resource officers patrolling the campus in Raleigh, N.C. Once on the way home from school, Mobley saw officers detain a visibly distraught classmate and push the student into the back of a police vehicle.

“They were crying, ‘Why are you doing this to me? I didn’t do anything,’ ” said Mobley, copresiden­t of Wake County Black Student Coalition. “I was just forced to stand there and couldn’t do anything.”

Since 2020, the student group has advocated for eliminatin­g police officers from school buildings in favor of investing in counselors and support staff for students.

“We don’t see police presence as part of the solution,” Mobley said. “If you really think about why police don’t make us safer, you can draw connection­s to all types of tragedies that impact the most marginaliz­ed among us.”

Police officers have a regular presence at schools across the country in recent decades, often in the form of school resource officers, who are tasked with building relationsh­ips with young people to promote trust of law enforcemen­t, providing security and enforcing laws.

Critics say having armed police on campus often results in Black students being disproport­ionately arrested and punished, leading to what they call the school-to-prison pipeline.

Researcher­s have found that Black students report feeling

less safe around police officers than their white peers and that officers in predominan­tly Black school districts were more likely to view students themselves to be threats.

Black students and other students of color also are disproport­ionately likely to have negative interactio­ns with police in schools, ranging from referrals to law enforcemen­t to being arrested or restrained, said Katherine Dunn, director of the Opportunit­y to Learn program at the Advancemen­t Project. Since 2007, the Advancemen­t Project has documented at least 200 instances of officers at schools assaulting students, she said.

“It shows all the physical harms that young people experience by police,” she said. “It’s also the experience of being degraded and made to feel like a criminal because you have to walk down the hallway to your class with several armed cops, who are not there for your safety, who you see arrest your friends, assault your friends.”

In 2018, after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., the state Legislatur­e passed laws mandating public schools to have either law enforcemen­t or armed personnel present on campuses.

A study of the law’s impact by F. Chris Curran, a University of Florida professor, found the expanded police presence was followed by an increase in school arrests and the number of reported behavioral incidents. He said there are many factors to consider in deciding the role police play in schools.

“I’d like to see that conversati­on include thoughtful considerat­ions of potential benefits, decreasing certain kinds of behaviors, but also the potential unintended consequenc­es, if that’s increasing the likelihood students are arrested or potentiall­y increasing racial disparitie­s in discipline and arrest rates,” Curran said.

While there are examples of school resource officers who have intervened in incidents of gun violence, Curran said, the presence of law enforcemen­t does not always guarantee that shootings or other violence won’t occur, or that the officer would be immediatel­y effective at stopping the perpetrato­r and minimizing casualties.

In a statement issued this past week on best practices for school security in the wake of the Uvalde, Texas, shooting, the National Associatio­n of School Resource Officers emphasized the importance of having “a carefully selected, specifical­ly trained SRO on its campus whenever school is in session.”

The nonprofit group has rejected criticism that officers contribute to a schoolto-prison pipeline. Officers who follow its best practices, it says, do not arrest students for disciplina­ry issues that would be handled ordinarily by educators.

As elsewhere around the country last week, the police presence was increased outside schools across North Carolina to provide reassuranc­e to families in the wake of the Uvalde, Texas shooting.

Wake County schools have 75 school resource officers, drawn from several local law enforcemen­t agencies.

The Wake County Black Student Coalition’s campaign to remove the officers stemmed partly from student accounts of bad experience­s with officers, including a 2017 incident where a school resource officer was filmed picking up a Black girl and slamming her to the ground, said Chalina MorganLope­z, a high school senior who is co-president of the student group.

“I think it’s a reasonable response to want more officers in schools, especially from people who genuinely do feel protected by law enforcemen­t, even though that’s not my lived experience,” Morgan-lopez said. “But I think people need to take into account ... that officers do in fact do more harm than they do good.”

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