2018 is a critical election year. This year, the June Primary and November General Election could result in a set of new County, State and National representatives who align with ACLU values, policies and investment goals around a variety of issues.

We need your help to make sure voters of color and young people get out to vote. And that we move forward our agenda for Smart Justice, protecting vulnerable immigrant and homeless neighbors and showing that Orange County Values are for Equality, Family and Fairness.

Join the effort as we call on critical voters in Southern California to make their voices heard (and bring your friends!).

Saturday, May 12, 10 a.m.
Unitarian Universalist Church in Anaheim
511 S. Harbor Blvd.
Anaheim, CA 92805

We will be canvassing from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m., please join us however long you can.

Lunch and snacks will be provided.

Event Date

Friday, May 11, 2018 - 4:15pm

Featured image

More information / register

Venue

Unitarian Universalist Church in Anaheim

Address

511 S. Harbor Blvd.
Anaheim, CA 92805
United States

E-mail address

CValencia@ACLUSOCAL.ORG

Website

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Date

Friday, May 11, 2018 - 4:15pm

Menu parent dynamic listing

64

In 2011, Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) adopted a policy mandating that every middle school and high school in the district must daily pull a group of students out of class to undergo a humiliating procedure: a "random" search of their person and of their belongings.

The students are forced to miss class time, gather their things, and enter the hall or a vacant classroom where school staff will ask them to spread their legs and arms as the adult passes a handheld metal detector wand over their bodies. The adults then rifle through students' backpacks — or dump them on a table — looking for "contraband." Law enforcement officers sometimes observe or carry out this intimidating procedure.

End random metal detector searches in LA schools

The searches are intended to be conducted in a non-biased, "random" manner. Yet students, parents, and teachers all report school staff targeting certain groups, including low-income students and students of color. The policy is intended to uncover weapons, but school staff have broad discretion to take any item that violates a school rule; school supplies such as white-out account for 61 percent of confiscated items.

Even if LAUSD's metal detector search policy is implemented with fidelity, the policy would place a heavy burden on students' personal integrity while serving little purpose: LAUSD's data demonstrates that the policy rarely uncovers the weapons it is intended to find — zero guns were found during random metal detector searches — and that the policy does not have any meaningful deterrent effect.

"Here to Learn" provides a full analysis of LAUSD's mandatory metal detector search policy. This analysis is based on a comprehensive review of LAUSD metal detection search logs produced in response to a Public Records Act (PRA) request for any entries containing weapons in the 2013-2014 and 2014-2015 school years by researchers at UCLA's Civil Rights Project. The analysis shows that the policy is expensive and ineffective at both finding and deterring weapons at schools. The study also shows that in practice, school staff take advantage of the policy to target particular students for punishment and humiliation. In addition, "Here to Learn" presents the narratives of students and educators. They urge the district to stop criminalizing students and to invest instead in developing healthy school communities.

KEY FINDINGS:

  • Only approximately 0.08% of 105,366 individual student searches conducted in LAUSD in 2013-14 and 2014-15 revealed a weapon of any sort, none of which were guns.  
  • LAUSD's "random" mandatory metal detector searches are not random. Instead, students are targeted based on behavior, location, or personal characteristics.
  • School staff frequently conduct the searches in a far more intrusive manner than the policy intended, with staff continuing to search belongings even when no weapons or metallic objects are present.
  • School supplies account for 61% of confiscated items, including primarily markers, scissors, white-out, and highlighters. Self-care and hygiene items account for 10%, including body spray, over-the-counter pain medication such as Advil and Midol, lotion, cough drops, asthma inhalers, and hand sanitizer.
  • Students consistently report feeling alienated, disrespected, and disempowered by the policy, explaining that the policy devalues their education and makes them feel like criminal suspects.
  • Mandatory metal detector searches force students to miss valuable classroom learning time — 24,000 instructional hours each year — to searches.
  • Mandatory metal detector searches waste staff time that could be spent on more productive activities to enhance student dignity and campus safety and wastes $1.12 million in staffing costs alone, which is particularly troubling in light of LAUSD's ongoing fiscal crisis.
  • LAUSD's mandatory metal detector search policy is not effective at deterring weapons possession on campus; the number of total weapons have increased since daily random metal-detector wand searches were made mandatory, from 653 incidents districtwide in 2013-14 to 783 incidents in 2014-15. Critically, almost all of these weapons were found by other means and were not discovered by the mandatory metal detector searches. Of the total number of weapons found in LAUSD schools, only 6% were found by mandatory metal detector searches.

Read "Here to Learn"

See our 2-page fact sheet

Tell LAUSD to stop random metal detector searches of students


Share these graphics: 


Share on Facebook | Share on Twitter | Download image



Share on Facebook | Share on Twitter | Download image

 

Date

Friday, June 1, 2018 - 9:30am

Featured image

Here To Learn: Creating Safe and Supportive Schools in Los Angeles Unified School District

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Related issues

Education Equity

Documents

Show related content

Tweet Text

ACLU CA report shows LAUSD's metal detector policy is ineffective & target particular students.

Share Image

Here To Learn: Creating Safe and Supportive Schools in Los Angeles Unified School District

Menu parent dynamic listing

69

Show PDF in viewer on page

Style

Standard with sidebar

Law enforcement agencies are deploying secret and invasive surveillance technologies to collect sensitive location and biometric data, target local activists, and feed ICE's deportation machine. Technologies like drones, social media surveillance, and license plate readers have invaded people's private lives and are being exploited by the federal government to tear California families apart.

This cannot continue.

Public safety in the digital era must include transparency and accountability when law enforcement seeks to use technology to monitor, target, and detain us. That's why today the ACLU of California and a diverse coalition of civil rights and civil liberties groups are announcing support of SB 1186, a bill that helps restores power at the local level and makes sure local voices are heard when surveillance proposals are on the table.

Urge California senators to pass a strong SB 1186 to rein in secret and discriminatory surveillance

The stakes are extremely high — the use of surveillance technology harms all Californians and disparately harms people of color, immigrants, and political activists. This is a persistent and alarming trend. The Oakland Police Department concentrated their use of license plate readers in low income and minority neighborhoods. In dozens of California communities, law enforcement deployed social media surveillance products designed to monitor Black Lives Matter, labeling protesters as "threats to public safety." San Francisco police officers misused a license plate reader, leading to the wrongful apprehension of an African-American woman at gunpoint. Earlier this year, news broke that ICE had gained access to a nationwide database of information about the locations of drivers that it can exploit for its deportation machine. These effects are particularly felt in neighborhoods who rely on sheriffs for their law enforcement, such as in Compton, where the LA Sheriff conducted aerial surveillance without telling residents.

But Californians have had enough.

Across the state, residents are fighting to take back ownership of their neighborhoods by saying no to an intrusive police presence and the secretive surveillance that enables it. And they're winning. Earlier this year, Alameda, Culver City, and San Pablo rejected license plate reader proposals after hearing about the ICE data deal. Communities are enacting ordinances that require transparency, oversight, and accountability for all surveillance technologies. In 2016, Santa Clara County, California passed a groundbreaking ordinance that has been used to scrutinize multiple surveillance technologies in the past year. Last month, Davis and Berkeley passed their own surveillance reform ordinances. And this week, Oakland adopted the nation's strongest surveillance technology ordinance.

SB 1186 helps enhance public safety by safeguarding local power and ensuring transparency, accountability, and proper oversight of law enforcement’s acquisition and use of surveillance technology. The bill covers the broad array of surveillance technologies used by police, including drones, social media surveillance software, and automated license plate readers. It also anticipates — and covers — AI-powered predictive policing systems on the rise today.

It's time to enhance public safety by restoring local power over law enforcement surveillance decisions. Without oversight, the sensitive information collected by local governments about our private lives feeds databases that are ripe for abuse by the federal government. This is not a hypothetical threat — earlier this year, ICE announced it had obtained access to a nationwide database of location information collected using license plate readers — potentially sweeping in the 100+ California communities that use this technology. Many residents may not be aware their localities also share their information with fusion centers, federal-state intelligence warehouses that collect and disseminate surveillance data from all levels of government.

Statewide legislation can build on the nationwide Community Control Over Police Surveillance (CCOPS) movement, a reform effort spearheaded by 17 organizations, including the ACLU, that puts local residents and elected officials in charge of decisions about surveillance technology.

If passed in its current form, SB 1186 would help protect Californians from intrusive, discriminatory, and unaccountable deployment of law enforcement surveillance technology. This is a very important step forward.

Now is the time to start making your voice heard: urge California lawmakers to support SB 1186.

SB 1186 is supported by a broad coalition of organizations, including the ACLU of California, American Friends Service Committee, Asian Law Alliance, Black Lives Matter Sacramento, California Immigrant Policy Center, Centro Legal de la Raza, Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice – Ventura County, Coalition for Human Immigrant Rights, Coalition for Justice and Accountability, Color of Change, Council on American-Islamic Relations – California, Courage Campaign, Defending Rights & Dissent, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, Fair Chance Project, Fools Mission, Freedom of the Press Foundation, Greenlining Institute, Indivisible California, Media Alliance, Oakland Privacy, OCCORD – Orange County Communities Organized for Responsible Development, Our Family Coalition, Presente Action, Peninsula Peace and Justice Center, Restore the 4th SF-Bay Area, San Francisco Peninsula People Power, San Jose Peace & Justice Center, Tenth Amendment Center, The Utility Reform Network.

Date

Wednesday, May 2, 2018 - 9:15pm

Featured image

Stop secret surveillance and protect our communities. Support SB 1186. Photo of two women at a rally, one woman with a fist raised.

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Share Image

Stop secret surveillance and protect our communities. Support SB 1186. Photo of two women at a rally, one woman with a fist raised.

Related issues

First Amendment and Democracy Police Practices

Show related content

Menu parent dynamic listing

68

Style

Standard with sidebar

Pages

Subscribe to ACLU of Southern California RSS