South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Privacy law jeopardize­s student safety, facilitate­s school cover-ups

-

Good intentions don’t necessaril­y make good laws. And so it is with the student privacy law known as FERPA, which has been used to cover up what the public is entitled to know when things go wrong — as they did, horribly, at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School last Valentine’s Day.

The law even appears to contribute to such tragic outcomes.

We’re speaking about the Family Educationa­l Rights and Privacy Act, commonly called FERPA, which Congress enacted in 1974 to give parents the right to inspect and challenge their children’s school records.

However well-intended, this law has become a convenient excuse for school and college bureaucrat­s — and their lawyers — to withhold informatio­n the public is entitled to know about such serious events as a serial rapist on a campus, academic favoritism to athletes, biased admission policies, and accidental injuries and deaths. College counselors claim it even bars them from warning parents of students who are suicidal.

One of the haunting questions from the massacre of 17 students and staff at Parkland — and the wounding of 17 more — is whether FERPA kept Broward school personnel from alerting law enforcemen­t to the menacing behavior of Nikolas Cruz, the former student charged with the murders.

The state commission investigat­ing the tragedy clearly considers FERPA at some fault. Its draft report, to be voted on this week, calls for eliminatin­g such “barriers to informatio­n sharing.” Moreover, it implies that the Broward school district stretched its interpreta­tion of the law too far.

“All stakeholde­rs’ personnel must be trained in the applicatio­n of privacy laws and importantl­y all applicable exceptions,” the draft report remarks.

Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, who chairs the MSD Commission, said in a Thursday email that his colleagues wholeheart­edly agree the law “needs to be changed and informatio­n needs to flow much more freely under circumstan­ces such as this.

“FERPA, HIPAA and other privacy laws are important and have their place,” he wrote, “but they have become de facto shields for ‘bad stuff’ that should be in the public eye.”

The Parkland commission’s draft is good, as far as it goes. And Reps. Ted Deutch, Debbie Wasserman Schultz and the rest of Florida’s congressio­nal delegation should act immediatel­y to implement it.

But they need to do more.

It’s evident that FERPA permeated the Broward school district’s pervasive and continuing cover-up of what its personnel knew about Cruz, and what they did or didn’t do to prevent a deeply troubled student from becoming a mass murderer.

As our reporters Brittany Wallman, Megan O’Matz and Paula McMahon wrote last week, FERPA seals informatio­n even on an admitted killer like Cruz, who is an adult and no longer a student.

At a minimum, the law must be changed to free up informatio­n pertaining to anyone who has been charged with a felony, and to allow school and college administra­tors to warn parents and law enforcemen­t of potential tragedies.

Judges also should be empowered to open student records for good cause to members of the media and the public who seek to hold government accountabl­e under the First Amendment.

FERPA, and a Florida law modeled on it, block federal funds to any educationa­l program that denies parents inspection rights or releases records that easily identify a child or parent without their permission. Limited exceptions apply, including for undefined health and safety emergencie­s.

Schools and colleges have been suspicious­ly eager to invoke FERPA, though no institutio­n has ever lost federal funds for providing informatio­n about matters of great public importance — or anything at all, for that matter.

The U.S. Department of Education did, however, successful­ly sue the Chronicle of Higher Education to suppress records pertaining to discipline at Miami University and Ohio State University. The Ohio Supreme Court sided with the publicatio­n, holding that the files were primarily law enforcemen­t records, not education records. But the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the government, saying Congress had failed to adequately define “education records.”

FERPA attracted less attention when it was enacted than it has since. Reporting on its passage, the New York Times said it “was prompted by increasing parent hostility to largely experiment­al federal-state teaching programs that include lengthy personal questionna­ires about a pupil’s home life, racial and sexual attitudes and relationsh­ips with others in stress situations.” It was introduced by then-New York Sen. James Buckley, who represente­d both the Conservati­ve and Republican parties, and backed by the American Civil Liberties Union.

As often happens, the reform went far beyond the problem at hand.

“When universiti­es want to deny public access to informatio­n that might blemish their reputation­s, they routinely claim that FERPA prohibits them from disclosing such informatio­n — even when disclosure is plainly warranted,” Jon Krakauer wrote in the New York Times Magazine of his difficulty in working on a book about campus rape in Montana.

In Florida, the Associated Press and other news organizati­ons fought a FERPA battle with the National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n in 2009 over the transcript­s of Florida State University’s appeal of penalties for improper assistance to athletes.

The First District Court of Appeal upheld a circuit court decision that the documents, having been received by a state agency, were public and not protected by FERPA because they did not contain “informatio­n directly related to a student.” Rather, they dealt with “allegation­s of misconduct” by the athletic department and only “tangential­ly” with the students who benefitted, the court said. But the names of the students remained protected.

In 2006, Florida’s Fifth District Court of Appeal ruled that FERPA did not apply to the release of the names of University of Central Florida student government officers accused of misconduct. They had waived privacy by campaignin­g publicly for the offices, the court said. But Knight News, the plaintiff, was denied access to the hearings and other details that it sought.

At the University of Florida, it took a lawsuit for a requester to get the video of a public meeting of the Student Senate.

All such cases are expensive, not only to the plaintiffs, but to the public, whose taxes finance the stonewalli­ng.

“No amount of fine-tuning is going to fix FERPA, which is catastroph­ically broken and needs to be rewritten completely,” says Frank Daniel LoMonte, professor and director of the university’s Brechner Center for Freedom of Informatio­n.

We agree.

Editorials are the opinion of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board and written by one of its members or a designee. The Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Rosemary O'Hara, David Lyons and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson.

 ?? COURTESY ?? One of the questions from the Marjory Stoneman Douglas massacre is whether FERPA prevented school personnel from alerting law enforcemen­t to Nikolas Cruz.
COURTESY One of the questions from the Marjory Stoneman Douglas massacre is whether FERPA prevented school personnel from alerting law enforcemen­t to Nikolas Cruz.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States