Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Don’t arm school police

There’s no evidence that it increases safety

- Harold Jordan Harold Jordan is senior policy advocate at the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvan­ia.

There is an emerging national debate about school policing. It is not about whether school police should be armed but about how best to improve school environmen­ts and ensure student success while minimizing unnecessar­y student arrests. Emerging best practices aim to reduce police involvemen­t in routine disciplina­ry school matters, ensure fairness in disciplina­ry processes, and increase the ratio of counselors and student support services to cops.

Sadly, while many communitie­s explore how to improve school climates by building trusting relationsh­ips between adults and students, Pittsburgh debates the arming of school police.

A Post-Gazette editorial (“Arm the Officers,” March 24) and the Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers executive board resolution both put forth troubling arguments that are at odds with what we know about school policing.

The most immediate impact of arming school police would be felt by students, as school-based police spend the bulk of their time interactin­g with students in non-emergency situations. Having officers patrol the hallways with firearms sends a negative message to students. It makes many students feel that they are being treated like suspects. It can have an intimidati­ng presence and can contribute to negative attitudes about police, in general.

There is no evidence that arming school officers increases overall safety or improves relationsh­ips within school communitie­s. Having an armed officer stationed in schools has neither prevented nor stopped “active shooter” incidents. It did not at Columbine High School nor has it elsewhere. Thankfully, these tragic situations are still rare in schools.

How school-based police interact with students and the tools they carry and sometimes use have been the source of controvers­ies. Incidents involving the use of even less lethal police tools, such as Tasers and pepper spray, have resulted in complaints, lawsuits and injuries to students. These have been on the rise in recent years.

Pittsburgh is far from alone in not having armed officers in schools. The largest school district in the state, Philadelph­ia, does not permit its school police to carry firearms. Instead, the School District of Philadelph­ia, its police department and the city police department have focused on institutin­g policies and programs designed to reduce unnecessar­y student arrests, which have been cut in half in recent years. And, so far, there has been no major uptick in violence in those schools.

Unarmed school staff does not mean that schools are defenseles­s in emergency situations. School districts have arrangemen­ts, formal or informal, with local law enforcemen­t in which outside assistance is provided when needed in emergencie­s, such as when there is a bomb threat or serious injury.

Especially troubling is the editorial’s argument that school police should be armed because police in surroundin­g communitie­s are.

Places of learning are not security zones or criminal justice institutio­ns, and they should not be staffed that way.

The national conversati­on about school policing has begun to focus on what kind of staffing is appropriat­e for schools. In 2016, the U.S. Department of Education released data showing that 1.6 million public school students attend schools with full-time police officers but no counselors. Recent studies have found that the number of police exceeds the number of counselors in many districts.

Forward-thinking districts are reconsider­ing the kinds of support staff that work in schools, not whether they should be armed.

Former superinten­dent Linda Lane got it right: “Guns and kids are not a good combinatio­n, no matter who has the gun.”

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