Committee Rejects More Delay Of In-School Suspension Requirement
Committee Rejects More Delay Of In-School Suspension Requirement
Robert A. Frahm
©The Connecticut Mirror
Connecticutâs public schools could be required as early as this year to keep most suspended students in alternative in-school programs rather than sending them home, a key legislative committee has decided.
A law limiting out-of-school suspensions was passed in 2007 but has been delayed because some educators and municipal officials have said it would be too costly.
âWeâve allowed a delay in in-school suspensions the past three years. Thereâs no need to delay it anymore,â state Senator Thomas Gaffey said Wednesday after the legislatureâs Education Committee failed to act on a bill that would have postponed the requirement another year.
Although a postponement still could be considered later by the General Assembly, the existing bill, in effect, is dead.
âObviously, weâre disappointed itâs not going to be delayed. It could cost towns millions of dollars statewide,â said Kevin Maloney, a spokesman for the Connecticut Conference of Municipalities.
The organization estimates the cost of hiring additional staff or creating additional space could range from $10,000 annually in a small town to as much as $4.5 million in a big city.
As the stateâs slumping economy continues to batter local budgets, âthis is not the time for a new unfunded mandate,â Maloney said.
The Connecticut Association of Boards of Education also opposes the law, said Robert Rader, the associationâs executive director. âWhile certainly we want to keep students in school, there are good reasons for suspending students out of school,â he said. âVery often it gets parents involved. It says to the student that this is a serious problem that has to be faced.â
However, Sen Gaffey, co-chairman of the Education Committee, said, âOur goal should be to keep students in school and keeping up with their schoolwork rather than having them out of school with idle time, getting in trouble.â
He said many in-school suspension programs already are under way and âare working extraordinarily well.â State figures show that more than half of the suspensions in public schools last year were handled in school. Sen Gaffey contended in-school programs would not add excessive new costs. âThe uproar over the fiscal impact of this is a myth,â he said.
At Cromwell High School, an in-school program, now in its second full year, is operated by a teacherâs aide and has reduced the number of out-of-school suspensions, said Principal Mark Benigni. âSuspending kids out puts them further and further behind and creates problems when they come back,â he said. âIf someone is overly disruptive and we have to suspend them [out of school], we will, but it is always a last choice.â
At Stafford High School, officials have had an in-school suspension program for many years but have attempted to expand its use over the past three years, said Superintendent of Schools Therese Fishman. âWe have reduced our out-of-school suspensions to about 7 percent,â down from about 20 percent, she said.
(This story originally appeared at CTMirror.org, the website of The Connecticut Mirror, an independent, nonprofit news organization covering government, politics, and public policy in the state.)