Texas
Students Thrown in Jail for Days ... as Punishment for Missing
School?
Texas's
solution to truancy appears to be making kids miss even more school
as they sit in jail
13
June, 2013
School
tardiness and absences come at a high cost in Dallas, Texas. Gone are
the days of detention and writing lines on the chalkboard; now
students are fined, even jailed.
The
enforcement of the state’s truancy laws, which were strengthened
substantially in 2003, have led to a range of abuses, according to
a complaint filed
Wednesday with the U.S. Department of Justice:
- Students have been taken out of school in handcuffs, held in jail for days at a time, and fines have totaled more than $1,000 for students who miss more than 10 days of school.
- The students who are hauled into court to face truancy or lateness charges are not provided with legal counsel. The only lawyers in the courtroom are the judge and a member of the district attorney’s office, unless the student’s family can afford their own representation.
- Defendants are charged court fees even if they prevail in fighting the accusations, discouraging people from exercising their right to a full hearing.
The
complaint, filed by a coalition of advocacy groups for young people
and the disabled, targets the Dallas, Garland, Mesquite, and
Richardson school districts in Texas and urges the Justice Department
to force reforms and “declare the practice of criminally
prosecuting children as adults for truancy” a violation of their
constitutional rights.
For
their part, some school officials, lawmakers, and judges say that the
rigid enforcement system has led to improved attendance.
“The
Dallas County system offers the best chance for truant students to
get back in class and graduate,” said Jenkins, adding that the
courts are staffed by attorneys who specialize in juvenile justice
issues, and make use of agencies who work to solve the underlying
issues behind the truancy of students.
Certainly,
the volume of cases has been striking. Texas adult courts in one
recent year handled 113,000
truancy cases.
Dallas County truancy court alone collected nearly $3 million in
fines. It sent 67 students age 17 and older to jail because of
truancy violations, and 53 students younger than 17 to juvenile
detention centers. (Statewide records were not available.)
The
complaint asserts that the program unfairly targets minorities and
underprivileged students, and routinely puts youngsters in jail
rather than keeping them in school.
Texas,
like many other states, has been struggling with truancy issues for
years. To combat the problem, the state legislature has passed a
series of laws to stiffen penalties for absent and tardy students. In
the 1990s, the legislature designated “failure to attend school”
as a Class C misdemeanor, which meant that children could be tried as
adults for missing school.
Texas
state law now requires schools to report students to truancy court
when a student has 10 or more unexcused absences within a six-month
period. The complaint says that when students appear in court, they
are often pressured to plead guilty and accept fines of anywhere from
$80 to $500 rather than go to trial, pay additional court fees, and
risk jail time. If students fail to appear in court or pay their
fines on time, they can be arrested and jailed. Wyoming is the only
other state in the country with a similar law, the complaint says.
In
2003, Dallas County got even more aggressive. According to the
complaint, county officials lobbied the legislature to allow it to
create its own specialized court system that would handle only
truancy cases. The request was granted and since then four public
school districts in the county have agreed to send their truant cases
to the specialized courts.
Michael
Harris, a senior attorney with the California-based National Center
for Youth Law, said each of those school districts are predominantly
African American and Latino, but are overseen primarily by white
superintendents, and that the specialized court system is overseen by
a white judge.
Chris
Moore, a spokesman for the Garland school district, said the district
has taken several steps to ensure parents are informed of their
children’s unexcused absences well in advance of any complaint to
the truancy court system. Tim Clark, director of communications for
the Richardson school district, said the district always acts within
the law in its handling of truants, and said that district officials
would cooperate with any federal inquiry. In a statement on its
website, the Mesquite school district said it informs students and
parents about state truancy laws in the beginning of each school
year.
A
call to the Dallas district superintendent was not immediately
returned. (If the district responds, we will update this article.)
“It’s
pretty obvious that this program is set in school districts that do
not have a large percentage of middle class white students. For
example, the Dallas independent school district has less than 10
percent white students,” said Harris. “These students are
thought of in a different way by key decision-makers in the county
than white students.”
A
handful of parents and students interviewed by ProPublica say that
the enforcement of the program has turned school grounds into
something like a police state, with guards rounding up students
during “tardy sweeps,” suspending them, then marking their
absences as unexcused and reporting them to truancy court. According
to the complaint, charges have been levied even when students have
legitimate reasons for an absence, such as a family emergency or
illness.
Ashley
Brown, a 16-year-old high school sophomore and honors student at
South Oak Cliff High School in Dallas, said she missed four straight
days of school in December 2012. Her grandmother, who she cared for
personally, died of cancer, and she stayed home to mourn her death.
She was also suspended twice for three days, once because she got in
a fight, and another time because she was late to class.
Brown
was eventually charged with 10 unexcused absences, even though
Brown’s mother sent the school the grandmother’s obituary, and
suspensions are supposed to be counted as excused absences under
state law.
When
Brown received a letter ordering her to appear in court, her mother
panicked and called the school to correct her daughter’s attendance
record. Afterward she missed a day of work and pulled her daughter
from school to appear in court and explain the confusion. Eventually
she persuaded the judge to dismiss the charges.
Andrew
Collins, the assistant principal at South Oak Cliff High School, told
ProPublica that he believes in the tough truancy program.
“To
an extent, I do believe if a student is continuously truant,
sometimes fines help solve a lot of that,” Collins said.
Others
haven’t been as successful as Brown in disputing their truancy
charges.
Roddi
Ann Schoneberg, a 40-year-old former pre-school teacher and mother of
three, said she struggled mightily to get her children to school on
time after her mother suffered a stroke late in the summer of 2011.
Her
children, two of whom she says are autistic, were traumatized by the
experience and often went into tantrums when they were supposed to
get ready for school in the morning. Overwhelmed by her children’s
behavioral problems and her responsibilities toward her ailing
mother, Schoneberg said she brought her elementary-school-aged
children to school five to 10 minutes late roughly 20 times in the
first half of the 2011 school year.
She
said her children’s elementary school in the Richardson school
district reported each late arrival as unexcused, and in December
2011 she received a notice to appear in court. School administrators
refused to help her, she said.
Schoneberg
said she intended to contest the charges, but ultimately succumbed to
pressure from court officers and a county prosecutor and pleaded
guilty. She was told that if she wanted to contest the charges at
trial, she’d be liable for court costs no matter the outcome. The
complaint alleges that Schoneberg’s experience is not unique; it
says the truancy court doesn’t provide legal counsel and frequently
threatens children and their families with jail time in open court,
thus encouraging people to plead guilty rather than go to trial.
The
county prosecutor initially tried to fine her $2,600, but Schoneberg
said the judge decided to reduce it to $609. She had to return to
court on five separate occasions to make payments.
“It
totally enveloped my life,” Schoneberg said.
The
policy, according to the complaint, can be especially hard on special
education students and the disabled, who often miss school because of
their physical or psychological issues.
The
complaint also describes the plight of a high school student who has
asthma and chronic respiratory problems. It says the student
sometimes needs to be out of school for days at a time to be closer
to her medical equipment at home.
Over
the course of the 2011 school year she had several multi-day absences
caused by her health problems, and on two occasions she forgot to
turn in a note from her mother explaining why she was away. She was
ultimately convicted of failure to attend school and paid a $100 fine
and $77 in court costs.
Her
lawyer, Dustin Rynders, supervising attorney for a disability rights
group in Texas, said the child ultimately missed as much school for
the court appearances as she did for her illness.
But
the complaint suggests these steps aren’t working: By the time
parents are able to reason with school administrators and get them to
understand why their child was absent, it’s too late— the
absences have already been reported to the truancy courts through an
automated electronic filing system.
“This
is an actual school to prison pipeline in terms of how they send kids
to adult criminal court for what’s really minor misbehavior,”
said Michael Harris, an attorney for the National Center for Youth
Law, who said he spent hours watching students get processed by the
courts. “Research shows that once they go to criminal court the
likelihood that they’ll be swept up in the justice system again
increases greatly.”
Harris
and his fellow attorneys hope that the Justice Department will use
the complaint as a roadmap to investigate the truancy court system in
Dallas and eventually force changes to it.
They
make several recommendations, like giving children proper legal
counsel and refraining from taking them out of class in handcuffs.
A
spokesperson for the Justice Department did not immediately return
calls for comment.
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