Analysis: Nearly 40% of Pennsylvania schools ‘persistently dangerous’

(The Center Square) – Pennsylvania students are not being provided with safe school choice options as the law requires because of its weak definition of “persistently dangerous,” a Commonwealth Foundation analysis finds.

Senior Education Policy Analyst of the Commonwealth Foundation Rachel Langan told The Center Square by email: “Federal and state law require that students attending a persistently dangerous school or those experiencing violence at school be provided with a transfer to a safe charter school, school within their own district, or at a neighboring district.”

Langan said that Pennsylvania law “defines a dangerous school based on the number of arrests, not the number of incidents.”

“Incidents,” according to Pennsylvania law, “include but are not limited to: Simple Assault, Aggravated Assault, Sexual Assault, Rape, Terroristic Threat, Bomb Threat, Arson, Vandalism, Criminal Trespass, Theft, Robbery, Suicide Attempt, Vandalism, and Possession of Weapon,” Langan said.

In its analysis, the Commonwealth Foundation proposes that state lawmakers redefine the definition of “persistently dangerous” to include violent incidents.

- Advertisement -

The Commonwealth Foundation said in its analysis that Pennsylvania is in violation of state and federal law for “failing to identify persistently dangerous schools and neglecting to provide safe school choice alternatives for students attending dangerous schools.”

If the Commonwealth Foundation’s solution of redefinition is enacted, over a third of Pennsylvania’s schools would qualify as dangerous, its analysis found.

According to a 24-year longitudinal study, 37.3% of Pennsylvania’s approximately 3,000 public schools are dangerous when dangerous is defined by incident, the foundation analysis says.

“These dangerous schools represent 46.5 percent of the public school student population statewide,” the analysis said.

Currently, the Pennsylvania Department of Education “has no records identifying persistently dangerous schools and failed to provide safe alternatives for students attending dangerous schools,” the analysis stated.

Rachel Langan told The Center Square that the result of defining dangerous schools based on arrests and not incidents is “under-reporting of violence because a district with thousands of incidents but only a handful of arrests can avoid being labeled as violent.”

- Advertisement -

“But for students experiencing violence, their safety is compromised when assaulted, whether or not the assault results in arrest,” Langan said.

The analysis stated that: “Calculating danger based only on arrests exploits a loophole in the law that results in school districts turning a blind eye to violence unless or until the violent incident results in an arrest. This practice neglects the law and, more importantly, ignores student safety.”

The worst areas in Pennsylvania for persistently dangerous schools as defined by incident are Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, with over 70% and 80%, respectively, of schools in the two districts falling under that category, according to the analysis.

Rachel Langan told The Center Square that “every child deserves a safe environment where they can learn and thrive.”

“By neglecting to follow and enforce federal law, Pennsylvania is not only endangering the lives of students but also risking the loss of billions of dollars in federal funding given the US Dept of Education’s recent enforcement of the ‘persistently dangerous schools’ labelling,” Langan said.

The Commonwealth Foundation’s analysis follows a May letter from the U.S. Department of Education to chief state school officers reminding them of the Unsafe School Choice Option provision located in the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965.

In the letter, states are reminded of their duty to provide a safe school choice for students and encouraged to regularly review and revise their definitions of “persistently dangerous.”

The Commonwealth Foundation is an organization aiming to “transform free-market ideas into public policies” in the state of Pennsylvania, as stated on its website.

spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

African and Caribbean Nations Call for Reparations for Slave Trade, Propose Global Fund

Nations across Africa and the Caribbean, deeply impacted by...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

Entertainment district benefits don’t outweigh the cost, economists say

(The Center Square) — Weeks later, after more details...

Iryna’s Law moving through state Senate

(The Center Square) – Proposed legislation drafted in response...

Op-Ed: FDA’s COVID-19 vaccine decision about evidence, not restriction

When the FDA announced new limits on COVID-19 vaccines,...

Wisconsin lawmakers propose incentives for aviation fuel plant in Hayward

(The Center Square) – A group of Wisconsin legislators...

Mamdani pulls out of ABC town hall over Kimmel firing

(The Center Square) — Democratic nominee for mayor of...

Trump to designate antifa as soon as today, Leavitt says

President Donald Trump will sign an executive order designating...

Appeals court upholds New York’s firearm restrictions

(The Center Square) — A federal appeals court has...

Trump Teases Autism ‘Answer,’ Oval Office Announcement Expected

(AURN News) — “Tomorrow we’re going to have one...

NBC: No Evidence of Left-Wing Ties in Charlie Kirk Killing

(AURN News) — Federal investigators have found no links...

More like this
Related

Iryna’s Law moving through state Senate

(The Center Square) – Proposed legislation drafted in response...

Op-Ed: FDA’s COVID-19 vaccine decision about evidence, not restriction

When the FDA announced new limits on COVID-19 vaccines,...

Wisconsin lawmakers propose incentives for aviation fuel plant in Hayward

(The Center Square) – A group of Wisconsin legislators...

Mamdani pulls out of ABC town hall over Kimmel firing

(The Center Square) — Democratic nominee for mayor of...