To what extent are districts, schools liable for students’ safety?
Here’s how the courts have weighed in and what their decisions mean for school accountability.
While a school’s primary goal is to educate students, another priority is providing a safe environment. It’s a responsibility enforced in federal, state and local laws, but ultimately, students can — and do — get hurt. And when they do, many blame the school or district.
Getting scraped up during recess, for instance, isn’t new. Neither is getting made fun of by a classmate. Some medical experts call falls and broken bones “inevitable,” and some scholars cite teasing as an “important preparation for life.” But more severe issues, including sexual harassment, cyberbullying and school shootings are increasingly penetrating classrooms, spurring legal disputes over who’s responsible.
“School safety is moving from the schoolhouse to the court of public opinion and the law,” said school safety consultant Kenneth Trump. “But every case is unique — the legal issues vary, the allegations vary, and that’s what makes it hard to pin it down to a handful of specific issues and put it in this neat little box.”
Hundreds of lawsuits point the finger at schools or districts when students get injuried. Among the most recent was a suit against Broward County Public Schools and the county sheriff’s office — both of which a federal judge said didn’t have a legal duty to protect students — after the Parkland, Florida, shooting. These cases span different issues and reached varying verdicts, but they involve the same question: To what degree are these entities liable for students’ safety?
Below, we’ve broken down a list of cases involving a school or district’s role in student safety. Here’s what happened and what they mean in the debate:
School shootings
M.S.D. of Martinsville v. Rebecca Jackson
What happened: In March 2011, two students at West Martinsville Middle School in Indiana were injured in a shooting: One, who was shot twice in the stomach, was targeted by the shooter — a former student known to threaten and harass his peers — according to court documents.
Though the shooter threatened the victim several times — and threats were reported to teachers before the shooting — teachers didn’t tell the administration, court documents say. Additionally, in the suit, the victim’s mother said the district didn’t protect her son because certain school entrances were left unlocked and monitors weren’t properly warned about the shooter being a threat, among other alleged safety breaches.
While the district argued the suit should be dismissed because it couldn’t have reasonably prevented the shooting, an appeals court disagreed.
What this means: This ruling shows schools or districts can be found liable if evidence proves the event could have reasonably been prevented, either because officials had reason to believe it would take place or if their response protocol wasn’t sufficiently implemented.
Source: To what extent are districts, schools liable for students’ safety? | Education Dive