The Denver Post

Proposed bill would ban corporal punishment

- By Jason Gonzales Chalkbeat Colorado is a nonprofit news organizati­on covering education issues.

Colorado would ban corporal punishment by schools and day care centers if a bill proposed by two Democratic legislator­s becomes law.

The state is one of 22 that allows corporal punishment in education.

It’s not clear how often it’s used — the state doesn’t collect that data and federal student discipline records show no Colorado cases — but advocates for children with disabiliti­es say they hear from parents who see bruises on their children’s arms, legs and even faces.

The bill to ban it has the support of disability and mental health advocacy groups that want the state to send a clear message that it’s never OK to hit a child.

“Most people are surprised we still allow it,” said state Sen. Rhonda Fields, an Aurora Democrat who is cosponsori­ng the bill. “It’s not the right message we want to send to administra­tors and schools.”

The bill is also sponsored by state Rep. Regina English, a Colorado Springs Democrat.

House Bill 1191 would prohibit an employee or volunteer from using corporal punishment on a child in a public school, a state-licensed child care center, a family child care home, or a specialize­d group facility. The bill defines corporal punishment as “the willful infliction of, or willfully causing the infliction of, physical pain on a child.”

The bill would require school districts and the Department of Early Childhood to prohibit the practice.

Colorado doesn’t collect data on corporal punishment, according to the Colorado Department of Education. The federal Office for Civil Rights didn’t record any complaints from Colorado about corporal punishment of students in 2017-18, the most recent data available.

Nationwide, the Office for Civil Rights reports boys are about four times as likely as girls are to be punished with corporal punishment. Black students also receive corporal punishment at twice the rate of their peers. The majority of corporal punishment reports come from Alabama, Arkansas, Mississipp­i and Texas, according to the federal office.

Emily Harvey, Disability Law Center attorney team leader, said students with disabiliti­es are also at high risk. Her office regularly gets calls from parents about physical pain inf licted on their child, she said. Those incidents often aren’t investigat­ed, she said. The bill makes a statement that physically hurting children, especially students with disabiliti­es, in Colorado is unacceptab­le, she said.

The bill “is just one extremely small step toward creating more inclusive and welcoming and, therefore, safer schools in Colorado,” Harvey said.

This is at least the second effort by Colorado lawmakers to ban corporal punishment. In 2017, a bill cleared the House, but stalled in a Republican­controlled Senate. Republican­s didn’t explain their vote.

At the time, sponsors and advocates couldn’t point to a single complaint about corporal punishment used in Colorado schools, a sticking point for some Senate Republican­s.

Advocates say this year’s bill is backed up by a body of research that physical discipline leads to a greater risk of health risks such as depression, antisocial behavior and suicide. School corporal punishment also may cause more aggressive behavior or low self-esteem in students.

To address behavior, Colorado schools should strengthen their support for students, said Vincent Atchity, executive director of the advocacy group Mental Health Colorado.

As a good example, he pointed to the I Matter program, which can provide a student six free virtual counseling sessions. He is pushing for the state to provide mental health assessment­s and referrals for students in sixth through 12th grades.

Allowing school staffers to hit students, Fields said, “is not appropriat­e when we have a nation and a state that’s dealing with an increase of violence and crime and where kids don’t feel safe in schools.”

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