Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Incompetence Wasn't the Problem in Broward County

Incompetence Wasn't the Problem in Broward County:
"...I detailed some of this last week in an article on what one public interest magazine called the "Broward County solution."  
In Broward County, they call it more modestly the "PROMISE Program."
In November 2013, Sundance first reported that Broward County was "willing to jump on the diversionary bandwagon."  
See the source imageAs an attached Associated Press article noted, "One of the nation's largest school districts has reached an agreement with law enforcement agencies and the NAACP to reduce the number of students being charged with crimes for minor offenses."  
The goal, as the article explained, was to create an alternative to the zero-tolerance policies then in place by giving principals, not law enforcement, the authority to determine the nature of the offense.
...Although nonsensical on the face of it – one is hard pressed to recall a crime spree by the disabled – this language opened the door for Nikolas de Jesus Cruz. 

 An adopted son of the late Roger and Linda Cruz, the future school shooter had a name that fit the "metrics" of the collaborative agreement, regardless of his DNA.
It is not hard to understand why Broward County officials would be eager to adopt this program. Miami-Dade had been receiving all kinds of honors for its efforts to shut down the dread "school-to-prison" pipeline. 

 On February 15, 2012, Miami-Dade County Public Schools put out a press release citing a commendation the Miami-Dade Schools Police (M-DSPD) had recently received. 
 The Department of Juvenile Justice had singled out Miami-Dade for "dramatically decreasing" school-related "delinquency." 
 Said M-DSPD Chief Charles Hurley, "Our mantra is education not incarceration."...
Read on!

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