jeudi 2 mai 2019

U.S : No child should ever be strip searched.



Four Black girls were embarrassed and traumatized due to school administrators racist assumptions. 


Demand the Binghamton City School District be held accountable for strip searching four young girls.





























Earlier this year, four 12-year-old Black and Latinx girls were strip searched at their middle school in Binghamton, NY, for being “hyper and giddy” at lunch. Though the girls did nothing wrong, schools officials assumed they were under the influence of drugs, and forced the girls to undergo vitals checks, sobriety checks, and a strip search. School officials criminalized these girls for normal, 12-year-old behavior, violated the girls’ Constitutional rights, and turned school into an unsafe and violent space. 

The parents of the four girls submitted a list of demands to the Binghamton City School District to ensure this never happens to another student. But, the District failed to meet those demands. Now, with the help of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and a group of lawyers, the parents are filing a lawsuit to hold the District accountable.





  
Please see our previous message below for more details about this campaign.
Black girls aren’t safe. This week it was revealed that a school nurse and vice principal at Binghamton East Middle School strip searched four Black girls because they were acting “hyper and giddy” at lunch. School authorities used the joy of these Black girls to claim  they were under the influence of drugs. Normal behavior for 12 year olds was used to justify traumatizing four Black girls, three of whom were forced to strip down to their underwear in front of adults. The fourth girl refused a search and was served with an in-school suspension instead.1

Black girls deserve to feel safe at school and not be violated for being joyful. There needs to be immediate consequences for the school officials who stripped searched these four Black girls.






We know that racist and sexist assumptions about Black girls lead to the perception that they are less innocent than white girls.2 These warped views play directly into the criminalization and rampant sexual abuse of Black girls; perpetrators aren’t worried about suffering serious consequences because societal messages tell them Black girls are without protection. These assumptions play directly into the fact that Black girls are six times more likely to be suspended from school than their white counterparts and more likely to experience long-term, negative effects on their emotional and educational development.3 From the over-policing of Black girls’ hair, to strip searching them for exhibiting normal pre-teen behavior, the criminalization of Black girls must stop.4

At Color Of Change, we’re making the following demands of the Binghamton City School District :
  • Fire the nurse, assistant principal, and principal of the school and any other personnel who oversaw the strip searches
  • End all school strip searches district-wide
  • Pay for culturally competent counseling for the four students involved
  • Require all district employees to undergo ongoing cultural competency training

This week, over 200 members of the Binghampton community packed the school board meeting and  demanded answers. The school district’s statement offered a lukewarm apology, stating that the “actions have had the unintended consequences of making the students feel traumatized.”5 The incident is up for review, with no answers for the community of who will lead the review or how long it will take. The four Black girls, and the larger Binghamton community, deserve transparency and accountability. They deserve to feel safe in their school and not worry about being strip searched because they expressed excitement during their lunch hour.






Until justice is real, 





Brandi, Rashad, Arisha, Evan, Johnny, Future, Samantha, Saréya, Eesha, and the rest of the Color Of Change team


















References :





  1. “Strip Search Of Four Black Girls By Middle School Officials Draws Outrage From Parents, Community Members In Upstate New York,” Blavityhttps://act.colorofchange.org/go/120695?t=9&akid=29205%2E1942551%2ER-e2ET.
  2. “#MeToo In Our Schools : Hearing Black Girls In The Sexual Abuse Backlash,” Women’s Leadership Project, 07 February 2018, https://act.colorofchange.org/go/77751?t=11&akid=29205%2E1942551%2ER-e2ET.  
  3. “From preschool to prison : The criminalization of Black Girls,” Center for American Progress, 08 December 2017,  https://act.colorofchange.org/go/120696?t=13&akid=29205%2E1942551%2ER-e2ET.
  4. “When Black hair violates the dress code,” NPR, 17 July 2017, https://act.colorofchange.org/go/120697?t=15&akid=29205%2E1942551%2ER-e2ET.
  5. “Binghamton residents protest alleged strip searches of four students at East Middle,” Press Connects, 24 January 2019,  https://act.colorofchange.org/go/120698?t=17&akid=29205%2E1942551%2ER-e2ET.

























Color Of Change is building a movement to elevate the voices of Black folks and our allies, and win real social and political change. Help keep our movement strong.














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