HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html The Dangers Of Surveillance
Pubdate: Mon, 03 Jan 2005
Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON)
Copyright: 2005 The Ottawa Citizen
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326

THE DANGERS OF SURVEILLANCE

If the trend toward more surveillance equipment in schools continues, it 
could create a furtive, suspicious and alienated generation of Ontarians.

The Ontario government recently announced school security measures, 
including safety audits of every school in the province, and funding that 
schools can apply for to pay for security equipment.

Some schools, including some in Ottawa, already use security cameras. They 
can be a useful and appropriate tool in schools where there have been 
problems with weapons, violence or intruders -- or where there is good 
reason to believe such problems could occur.

No parents want to worry about their children's safety during the school 
day. Violent incidents in schools are rare, but frightening, and they 
receive a lot of attention.

Widespread installation of cameras is not the answer.

The current tendency to consider an area "safe" only if it is monitored by 
cameras is misguided. Generations of students have attended school without 
having their every move recorded. Electronic surveillance should not be a 
default measure, but a last resort.

Schools should resist the urge to place cameras in out-of-the-way places 
for no other reason than that they are out-of-the-way. If a hallway or 
entrance is little-used, that is not reason enough to install cameras. 
There must be some reason to believe the area could become a security threat.

Surveillance, by its nature, gives the impression that someone in authority 
anticipates wrongdoing. If Ontario were to put cameras in every area of 
every school, it would send the message that our government believes there 
is something inherently suspicious about the areas where young people spend 
time.

Comprehensive surveillance would only make students more rebellious, and 
more creative in finding ways to rebel. If schools become prisons, no one 
should be surprised if students start acting like criminals. Students do 
expect some monitoring of their behaviour while they are in school. 
Nonetheless, they also have an expectation of some privacy, and a right to it.

About a year ago, Ontario's privacy commissioner published a set of 
guidelines for the use of cameras in schools.

The guidelines recommend, among other things, that boards develop policies 
governing the use of cameras; that video surveillance only be used where 
less intrusive monitoring has not been effective or workable; that signs 
mark the locations of cameras; and that the footage be used only for the 
purposes stated in the policies.

This last point is especially important. If students or staff believe the 
cameras could be used to monitor their everyday behaviour, that could have 
a dire effect on the morale in schools.

Ontario is still far from the stage where students swipe identity cards or 
pass through metal detectors to get to class. That kind of surveillance 
could come to Ontario, though, if our schools begin to value security at 
any cost.

The Ontario government has said it wants the education system to instill 
values. Students who are treated with trust and respect are likely to adopt 
those values themselves.
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MAP posted-by: Beth