ATLANTA (AP) — Recent student suicides have parents and advocates complaining that anti-bullying laws enacted in nearly every state are not being enforced and do not go far enough to identify and rid schools of chronic tormentors.
Forty-four states expressly ban bullying, a legislative legacy of a rash of school shootings in the late ‘90s, yet few if any of those measures have identified children who excessively pick on their peers, an Associated Press review has found. And few offer any method for ensuring the policies are enforced, according to data compiled by the National Conference of State Legislatures.
The issue came to a head in April when 11-year-old Jaheem Herrera committed suicide at his Atlanta-area home after his parents say he was repeatedly tormented in school. District officials denied it, and an independent review found bullying wasn’t a factor, a conclusion his family rejects.
Regardless, Georgia’s law, among the toughest in the nation, still would not have applied: It only applies to students in grades six to 12. Herrera was a fifth-grader.Georgia’s law has one of the largest gaps between what it requires of districts and the tools it gives them for meeting those requirements.
The state doesn’t collect data specifically on bullying occurrences, despite legislation that promises to strip state funding from schools failing to take action after three instances involving a bully.
After Herrera’s death, other parents came forward to say their children had been bullied and that school officials did nothing with the complaints, rendering the state’s law useless.
“There is a systematic problem,” said Mike Wilson, who said his 12-year-old daughter was bullied for two years in the same school district where Herrera died. “The lower level employees, the teachers, the principals, are trying to keep this information suppressed at the lowest possible level.”
Only six states — Montana, Hawaii, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, North Dakota and South Dakota — and the District of Columbia lack specific laws targeting school bullying, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Most states require school districts to adopt open-ended policies to prohibit bullying and harassment.
While some direct state education officials to form model policies that school districts should mimic, they offer little to assure the policies are enforced; only a handful of states require specific data gathering meant to assure bullying is being monitored, for instance.
“The states themselves can’t micromanage a school district — but they can say to a school district, ‘Look, you have to have consequences,'” said Brenda High, whose Web site, Bully Police USA, tracks anti-bullying laws across the nation, and who advocates for strict repercussions for bullies.The Washington state-based advocate’s son, Jared, was 13 when he committed suicide in 1998 after complaining of bullying.
“It needs to be written into the law that bullying has the same consequences as assault,” she said.
- Dionne Walker