Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Student truancy fines on last legs

Finance official bans state from collecting families’ owed debts

- By Jennifer Smith Richards Chicago Tribune and Jodi S. Cohen Smith Richards is a Tribune reporter. Cohen is a Chicago-based reporter for ProPublica.

Illinois’ top financial official has banned local government­s from using a state program to collect debt from students who have been ticketed for truancy, eliminatin­g a burden for families struggling to pay steep fines.

A number of school districts around the state, meanwhile, have begun to scale back and reevaluate when to involve law enforcemen­t in student discipline, among them a suburban Chicago high school where Black students have been disproport­ionately ticketed. That school, Bloom Trail High School in Steger, said Thursday that it will stop asking police to ticket students and move to other methods of discipline.

The moves come after an investigat­ion by the Tribune and ProPublica, “The Price Kids Pay,” found that school officials and police were working together to ticket students for misbehavio­r at school, resulting in fines that could cost hundreds of dollars per ticket. When students or their families failed to pay, local government­s sometimes turned to the state for help collecting the money.

The state told municipali­ties that beginning June 11 they no longer may submit truancy ticket debt for collection­s, according to an email from the Illinois comptrolle­r’s office to municipali­ties that participat­e in the state’s Local Debt Recovery Program. Through that program, the state helps local government­s collect on unpaid penalties for ordinance violations, unpaid water and sewer bills and other municipal debts by withholdin­g money from people’s tax refunds, their lottery winnings or even their paychecks if they are state employees.

School and police officials have also responded to the investigat­ion. Among those districts is Elginbased U-46, the second largest in the state, which has stopped working with police to fine students for truancy and is reviewing whether police should be involved in fewer situations overall.

The U-46 superinten­dent, Tony Sanders, said he thinks the widespread school-related ticketing revealed by the Tribune and ProPublica should prompt “school leaders across Illinois, and across the nation, to reflect on our current systems related to student behavior” and find alternativ­es that keep students in school and don’t punish families financiall­y.

The investigat­ion found that punishing students with tickets violates the intent of a state law that bans schools from issuing fines as discipline. While not fining students directly, schools have been involving police so students can be ticketed and, in most cases, fined.

Another state law prohibits schools from notifying police about truant students so officers can ticket them. The investigat­ion found dozens of school districts where students received tickets for truancy since the law went into effect in 2019.

A spokespers­on for Illinois Comptrolle­r Susana Mendoza said her office decided to prohibit collection­s on truancy ticket debt because state law is clear that schools aren’t allowed to seek fines for truant students. At this point the comptrolle­r’s office has not stopped collecting other types of student ticket debt, the spokespers­on said.

Officials at Bloom Trail High School in Chicago’s south suburbs, featured in “The Price Kids Pay” for its racial disparitie­s in ticketing, said they will work with students to resolve difference­s when they get in trouble instead of calling the police to request that tickets be written.

The school “is committed to no longer seeing students receive police citations,” according to an emailed response on behalf of the district. “In order to prevent this, we are developing alternativ­e approaches that will reduce the number of circumstan­ces in which we will involve the local police.”

Police had issued 178 tickets to Bloom Trail students from the start of the 2018-19 school year through March. Almost all of the tickets were for fighting, and almost all went to Black students.

The police chief in the village of Steger said that if the school asks for help with a more serious matter, officers with juvenile training will work with students and try alternativ­es such as requiring community service. Until now, students who have gotten tickets have been required to attend municipal hearings, and they typically got fined.

“They are going to try to do more in-house with the kids, which is good for us because we are there all the time,” Steger police Chief Greg Smith said. He also said that after receiving the comptrolle­r’s directive, Steger will not submit to the state collection­s program any unpaid debt from truancy tickets.

“We will stop doing that,” Smith said.

The investigat­ion documented at least 11,800 tickets issued over the last three school years to students in public schools across the state. Most of the tickets identified were for violating local ordinances against fighting, tobacco or vape possession or use, having small amounts of cannabis or truancy.

The Tribune-ProPublica investigat­ion documented 1,830 truancy tickets issued during the past three school years across about 50 school districts. Police continued to ticket students for truancy in more than 40 districts after the 2019 law went into effect.

For instance, at Dundee-Crown High School in Carpenters­ville, police issued 649 tickets for truancy from January 2019 through Dec. 7, 2021, the largest number of truancy tickets that reporters documented. At $75 each, the tickets totaled nearly $50,000, police records show.

A spokespers­on for Community Unit School District 300, which includes Dundee-Crown, did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

At nearby Wauconda High School, almost all of the nearly two dozen truancy tickets issued to students came after the state banned schools from referring truant students to police. One student got a ticket after leaving “to go to McDonald’s and go home,” according to the ticket. Another was ticketed for missing the first three class periods, and a group of boys were ticketed after they “left and tried to return to school for lunch,” the tickets stated. Each ticket came with a $50 fine that doubled if not paid within a couple of weeks. District officials did not respond to requests for comment.

Local government­s can try to collect debt from unpaid student tickets through private collection agencies or the state collection­s

program. Municipali­ties that use the state program send debt informatio­n to the comptrolle­r’s office without indicating the reason for the fine or the age of the debtor. Since the state does not know if it is pursuing debt from a young person or whether it was related to truancy, the onus is on local government­s to follow the comptrolle­r’s directive.

The ban on truancy debt collection­s applies to tickets issued by police to students or to their parents or guardians.

“The General Assembly has made clear its intention that schools not fine students for misbehavio­r, though they did leave the door open for schools to let police fine their parents for some activity,” comptrolle­r’s office spokespers­on Abdon Pallasch wrote in an emailed statement. “But the legislator­s put serious restrictio­ns on schools’ ability to let law enforcemen­t fine students’ parents for truancy. We agree with that policy.”

Samantha Corzine had about $800 withheld from her state tax refund in 2020 because of debt owed by her daughters for tickets — including for truancy — that they received while students at Bradley-Bourbonnai­s Community High School in Bradley. She said the comptrolle­r’s decision to stop collecting on some student debts is a step in the right direction.

“I’m glad they actually did that,” she said. “The state should not be able to take any money from parents.”

A clerk at the village said debt from students’ truancy tickets would not be pursued through the state program. The Bradley-Bourbonnai­s high school principal has said that it’s school administra­tors’ responsibi­lity to alert police if students violate local ordinances.

Just hours after the investigat­ion was published last month, Illinois’ top education official, Superinten­dent Carmen Ayala, told school leaders to “immediatel­y stop” working with police to ticket students, saying that “the only consequenc­es of the tickets are to impose a financial burden on already struggling families and to make students feel even less cared for, less welcome, and less included at school.” Gov. J.B. Pritzker, meanwhile, said conversati­ons were already underway with legislator­s “to make sure that this doesn’t happen anywhere in the state of Illinois.”

One district superinten­dent contacted by reporters, however, said he would continue to support involving police to either arrest or ticket students when their behavior is violent or extremely disruptive.

Without police interventi­on, “schools will become the most violent, drug-filled places students attend,” said Jacksonvil­le School District 117 Superinten­dent Steve Ptacek. “We owe it to our communitie­s to keep schools safe, free from drugs, and focused on our academic atmosphere.” Officers wrote about 20 tickets at Jacksonvil­le High School, west of Springfiel­d, in the past three school years, according to Jacksonvil­le Police Department records. Most were for student fights, though some were for truancy. None was for drugs. But several other districts have begun to make changes in response to the investigat­ion and Ayala’s plea.

In Harvard Community Unit School District 50, northwest of Chicago in McHenry County, Superinten­dent Corey Tafoya wrote in an email that an internal review of practices was underway. The deputy police chief in Harvard also said officers would immediatel­y stop ticketing students for truancy.

Police had ticketed students at the high school and junior high at least 231 times over the past three school years, according to police records. At least 67 of the tickets were for truancy, and most of those had been issued since the state banned schools from referring truant students to police for fines.

“In light of the article being written, we decided we are not going to issue truancy tickets anymore. The school can handle it,” Harvard Deputy Chief Tyson Bauman said. He said school resource officers — police stationed at the schools — will still write citations for other local ordinance violations, including possession of tobacco or vaping materials and fighting.

Superinten­dent Jesse Brandt of Hall High School District 502, a one-school district of about 400 students in rural Bureau County, said school employees will no longer refer truant students to police. At least 10 truancy tickets were written to students there after the state truancy law was enacted.

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