During recent weeks, millions of children returned to school
to start a new academic year.
Unfortunately, this early into the new school year, we already have another
report of a gunman entering a school threatening students and educators while
making parents and the community at large worried and anxious. The recent event in Georgia thankfully ended
without any fatalities, which l presume is one reason why we did not witness
the point-counterpoint ranting in the national media about gun control that
developed in the wake of the Aurora theater shootings, the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings, or other similar headline-making events. Regrettably, it takes a single massive loss
of life for gun violence to enter the national consciousness. In this way, sadly, loss is relative. Nevertheless, gun violence in Chicago – which has become an all too regular way of life – is an important local issue with
greater significance at the start of this school year. The recent shooting of five people brings
this into sharp relief.
Over the summer, Mayor Rahm Emanuel pushed through his plan to close 50 Chicago Public Schools, arguing that it was
necessary in order to, among other things, save money on underutilized schools
and have students in so-called failing schools attend quote-unquote better
schools. Emanuel further
aimed to ease parental and communal concerns of how the school closings jeopardized
the safety students who had been displaced from their traditional neighborhood
school and now had to cross boundaries claimed by rival gangs in some of the
city’s more dangerous neighborhoods. The Safe Passage program deploys police and fire department personnel augmented
with recently hired part-time city employees to intersections along the routes
students travel, escorting them to and from school.
Image from The Chicago Tribune, August 08, 2013; available at http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2013-08-08/news/ct-met-cps-safe-passage-20130808_1_safe-passage-program-elementary-schools-cps |
A shooting along one of these Safe Passage routes, however,
calls the entire enterprise into question.
On August 19th – on the eve of the first day of school - five
people were shot in front of the Uptown Baptist Church, with one victim later dying from his wounds. While early
reports described the incident with the catch-all label of “gang related,” it
now seems that the victims were innocent bystanders, participants in some of
the Church’s outreach programs for the homeless.
Now with the first weeks of school behind us, Chicago Police Commissioner Garry McCarthy calls Safe Passage a success. Still, two interrelated questions linger. These are: how long before another shooting of innocents along a Safe Passage
route occurs, particularly when asking how long can Safe Passage survive. Even now, stories are emerging of Safe Passage personnel abandoning their posts or out rightly quitting.
I have written before that schools should be welcoming
environments in which students feel safe, but a safety not created through militaristic
elements or authoritarian practices.
I wonder, however, what hope is there for school children to feel safe in school when they
cannot feel safe on the way to school?
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