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MAKING SCHOOLS SAFER BY FACILITATING INFORMATION SHARING
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
September 9, 2008
Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen Testified Today Before the Legislative
Council Special Committee on School Safety
MADISON – Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen testified today before the
Legislative Council Special Committee on School Safety. He focused on ways
Wisconsin law can be changed to facilitate information sharing and enhance
school safety.
“Schools are not islands separate from society,” said Van Hollen. “They are
integral parts of communities. The public safety issues that plague communities
are present and sometimes intensified at schools. While shootings and other
acts of violence at school are rare, they are not rare enough.”
“Just yesterday, we learned the tragic news that a 15-year old Milwaukee
schoolgirl died from wounds suffered last week in an afterschool fight. It is a
sober reminder that no community is immune from violence. No child is ever
completely safe from crime,” said Van Hollen. “Wisconsin’s schoolchildren are
targets for sex predators. Schools can be marketplaces for illicit drugs; kids,
buyers and sellers. And high school and even middle school campuses can be
recruiting grounds for gangs.”
“We all recognize that violence and crime at school can undermine the
education of all students,” said Van Hollen. “To borrow the motto of Milwaukee
Public School’s Safety Division, ‘Education first, safety always.’”
Encouraging legislative change to facilitate access to information, Van
Hollen stated, “Law should permit the sharing of information, at the very least,
with those who have a need for that information to make informed decisions and
undertake informed actions. In the school safety context, this means educators,
administrators and law enforcement that are charged with protecting kids and the
school community.”
Van Hollen’s specific recommendations for legislative action to facilitate
information included:
- Making state law no more restrictive than federal
law when it comes to sharing information relating to school safety with
law enforcement authorities;
- Repealing laws that limit school officials ability
to share with one another information that a pupil poses a physical
safety risk to others;
- Simplifying information sharing with law
enforcement, requiring school districts to provide records of a law
enforcement agency who need the information for a juvenile justice
purpose;
- Ensuring that school liaison officers have equal
access to records as teachers; and
- Enabling mandatory notification to schools of
criminal proceedings involving a K-12 student being tried in adult
court.
In addition, the Attorney General suggested that the legislature consider
mandatory reporting of certain criminal activities occurring on school grounds
to authorities. He also encouraged school districts to designate law
enforcement units, use school liaison officers, and ensure that safety
information gets to individuals within the school district skilled in threat
assessment so appropriate safety strategies can be implemented.
A copy of his prepared remarks is attached.
Attorney General Van Hollen's
Testimony on Making Schools Safer [PDF]
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