Pubdate: Mon, 5 May 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Geoff Johnson Note: Geoff Johnson is a retired superintendent of schools who lives in Mill Bay. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) SAFETY VS. FREEDOM The recent Supreme Court decision on searching school backpacks puts a large number of students at risk The Supreme Court of Canada decision that school searches of backpacks is illegal will surely come as a surprise to secondary school principals and vice-principals who thought that they, and not the Supreme Court, were in charge and responsible for controlling what adolescent children brought into the school building in their backpacks. Those same principals and vice-principals also had thought that since they were, under the School Act, responsible "in loco parentis" for the well-being and safety of all children under their care during school hours that this responsibility might be seen to outweigh any considerations of privacy on behalf of the few children who, for whatever reason, bring guns, knives, drugs and other non educational paraphernalia into the school. And that, like it or not, happens all the time. Not so, says the Supreme Court in its most recent decision: "As with briefcases, purses and suitcases, backpacks are the repository of much that is personal . . . . Teenagers may have little expectation of privacy from the searching eyes and fingers of their parents, but they expect the contents of their backpacks not to be open to the random and speculative scrutiny of the police. This expectation is a reasonable one that society should support." The court went on to explain to long-suffering high school administrators that, "When rights and interests as fundamental as personal privacy and autonomy are at stake, the constitutional role of the court suggests that the creation of a new and more intrusive power of search and seizure should be left to Parliament to set up and justify under a proper statutory framework." This is very bad news for those charged with protecting the freedoms and rights of kids who don't bring bad stuff to school and very good news for those few kids who do. True, the court decision arises out of a single event where an Ontario Catholic school was locked down for a couple of hours while police and a trained dog searched for, and subsequently found a backpack with bags of marijuana and magic mushrooms in a gymnasium. There may be more to the story, but on the face of it the decision creates and enormous problem for those trying to control schools. It is not uncommon for school administrators to receive information from kids who don't see the school as a drugstore or a weapons mall, and to act "in loco parentis" upon that information in an attempt to convey the message that they are serious about "no drugs or weapons in our school" and that the school is a safe place for our children. Again, not so. "While the [dog] search may have been seen by the police as an efficient use of their resources, and by the principal of the school as an efficient way to advance a zero-tolerance policy, these objectives were achieved at the expense of the privacy interest (and constitutional rights) of every student in the school." That will also come as a bit of a puzzlement to school administrators and, one would hope, to many parents who might have thought that protecting the rights of all children to a safe and drug-free education was exactly what the principal in this case was doing. Apparently that action can now only be taken by an act of Parliament if reports of the Supreme Court's decision have been accurately reported. I know, I know, the law is there to protect everybody's right against unlawful search and seizure, but when you have a building with a few adults trying to control the actions of maybe a thousand adolescent children, many of whose judgment about what's right and what's wrong is still in the formative stage -- well, things can get pretty challenging as it is. Knowing that among those children are even one or two who have some potential to harm others, and every large school, public or private, has those one or two, keeps school administrators on guard. If this otherwise reliable student who is troubled by drugs or weapons in the school comes to the principal and tells the principal that Johnny has dope or a gun in his backpack -- what is the principal's next logical step short of informing the police, who then attempt, on the basis of this flimsy information and in the light of the Supreme Court's opinion, try to obtain a search warrant that day? No. The principal should call Johnny into the office with his backpack and the combination to his locker, explains the situation and, with or without Johnny's permission, take a good long look through both. The harm done to Johnny's freedoms surely is outweighed by the drug availability in the school or even the potential for a repetition of the kind of unthinkable school incidents we read about every other week. We need the law and we need the Supreme Court but we also need day-to-day common sense. While the learned judges were no doubt correct within the complexities of law, Robert Green Ingersoll put it better: "It is a thousand times better to have common sense without education than to have education without common sense." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake