Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Contact:  213-237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Pubdate: Sun, 1 Mar 1998
Author: Jesse Katz, Times Staff Writer

TAKING ZERO TOLERANCE TO THE LIMIT

An A-student's gift of wine to a teacher gets him suspended. Absolute bans
on drugs and alcohol can be pushed to bizarre  extremes, critics say.
Exemptions invite chaos, enforcers reply.

MYRNA, Ga.--Mrs. Ellingsen, the French teacher, was Cosmo's  favorite. "She
was the funniest," the 13-year-old honors student  said. "She was the
nicest." On his A-average report card last  December, she reciprocated. "A
pleasure to have in class," she  wrote. "Enthusiastic."

Every Christmas, Cosmo gives his favorite teachers a present.  He sits down
with his parents--a renowned telescope designer and a  veteran flight
attendant--and they decide on a gift tailored to the  special tastes of
each instructor. This year, it was a teapot for  his social studies
teacher. A set of salt-and-pepper shakers for his  English teacher. And for
his French teacher, French wine--Baron  Philippe de Rothschild's Mouton
Cadet, courtesy of the Bordeaux  region, to be exact.

Cosmo put the bottle in a box and wrapped it in elf-spotted  paper and a
bow. He gave it to her, beaming, two days before winter  vacation. "She
opened it up and said, "Merci beaucoup,' " the  eighth-grader recalled. "I
thought it was a great gift. I mean, she  told us she had lived in France.
I assumed she would at least drink  a little wine."

When it comes to drugs and alcohol, however, the Cobb County  School
District here in suburban Atlanta is guided by a policy of  "zero
tolerance," not joie de vivre. As she is required to do,  Betsey Ellingsen
turned over the contraband to the Griffin Middle  School principal, Shirley
Bachus. Bachus (a name shared,  coincidentally, with Bacchus, the Roman god
of wine) summoned the  offender to her office. And Cosmo
Zinkow--college-prep student,  All-Star first baseman, blues guitarist,
scratch golfer, aspiring  astronaut--found himself in the deepest trouble
of his young  academic life, slapped with a two-week suspension.

"Zero tolerance means zero tolerance," explained Jay Dillon,  the
district's director of communications. "In matters of student  safety, we
can't take chances."

All across America, educators are embracing that absolutist philosophy--no
slip-ups, no exceptions, no excuses. In a growing number of celebrated
cases, no common sense also might be added to the litany. But with schools
everywhere feeling besieged--by disruptive students as well as by litigious
parents--many administrators see zero tolerance as a last line of defense,
a tough and consistent response to the fraying fabric of their communities.

The rules are seductively simple. Every weapon is a weapon,  whether it's
an AK-47 or a Boy Scout camping knife. Every drug is a  drug, whether it's
a rock of cocaine or a Tylenol tablet. And every violation is met by a
predetermined punishment--ranging from suspension to expulsion--whether the
violator's heart is malevolent or benign. No need for hand-wringing, for
weighing mitigating factors, for considering the ambiguities of each
student history and parental circumstance. Breach the security of the
school and you're gone.

"Too much is at stake," said Gary Marx, spokesman for the  American Assn.
of School Administrators, which represents about  15,000 superintendents
and other top officials. "If the rules appear  strict, well, that's just
the price we pay for maintaining the  sanctity of the learning
environment."

The impulse to stand firm, to reduce all choices to right or wrong,
permeates more than just school campuses these days. Zero tolerance has
become a mantra for the '90s--a call for order, for  discipline, for a
society that punishes bad behavior, instead of  rewarding it with a movie
deal.

Zero Tolerance for Infinite Situations

Zero tolerance is applied in Fortune 500 corporations and in  the U.S.
armed forces, in churches and courtrooms and shopping  malls, by Los
Angeles County restaurant inspectors and by police on the streets of
Disneyland. There is zero tolerance for sexual  harassment, for racial
discrimination and for hazing, zero tolerance  for graffiti, for gang
attire and for jaywalking, zero tolerance for public imbibing on the Fourth
of July and for shooting off guns on New Year's Eve.

President Clinton has backed zero tolerance--for terrorism, for drug
trafficking, for teenage drinking and driving--in at least 29 speeches. In
this newspaper, the number of stories mentioning "zero tolerance" has
jumped more than 400% since the start of the decade--with the phrase
appearing last year, on average, once every 2.5 days.

As a rallying cry, this is a no-lose proposition; nobody, after all, wants
to tolerate repugnant or criminal conduct. But as a practical matter, zero
tolerance sometimes means zero options, a one-size-fits-all punishment for
offenses that are not always  equally offensive. It is one thing to say
that guns and drugs have  no place in schools. It is quite another to use
those rules against  students like these, all suspended for violating zero
tolerance policies in recent years:

* A 13-year-old Oregon boy, for taking a swig of Scope after  lunch.

* A 13-year-old Texas girl, for carrying a bottle of Advil,  detected in
her backpack by a drug-sniffing dog.

* A seventh-grader in West Virginia, for giving a zinc cough lozenge to a
friend.

* An eighth-grader in Pennsylvania, for trying to get laughs by sucking on
an Alka-Seltzer tablet.

* A 17-year-old Georgia girl, for bringing an African tribal  knife to her
world history class.

* A 5-year-old Virginia boy, for taking his mother's beeper on  a
kindergarten trip to the pumpkin patch.

* An 11-year-old North Carolina boy, for passing around a  home-grown chili
pepper that caused another child's face to swell  up.

* And another North Carolina boy, 6-year-old Johnathan  Prevette, who made
headlines for planting an unwelcome kiss on the  cheek of a first-grade
classmate.

"If this is how we treat our kids, we might as well be  communists," said
Gina Coslett, 34, a social worker from Longmont,  Colo., a suburb of
Denver.

Last month, Coslett's 10-year-old daughter, Shanon, became the  latest
child to call the righteousness of zero tolerance into  question. An
A-student at a rigorous charter academy that emphasizes "character
education," Shanon was preparing her lunch one morning,  only to discover
that she had forgotten to bring her lunch box home  from school. So the
fifth-grader threw her pasta salad and crackers  into her mother's lunch
box, a soft nylon pack with a mesh pocket  under the top flap.

At lunch time, Shanon opened it up and began to eat. Only after  she was
finished did she notice that the wooden handle of an old  steak knife was
sticking out of the pouch.

"I eat a green apple every day," explained her mother, who uses  the knife
to slice the fruit. "Shanon didn't even recognize the  knife. She didn't
know that I carried one in my lunch box. She  didn't have any idea where it
came from."

But Shanon, an athletic girl with straight blond hair and  oval-framed
glasses, did know what to do. She raised her hand,  expressed her surprise
to the cafeteria attendant and handed over  the utensil.

"At a quarter to 3, they called me," Coslett said. "They said  that Shanon
had brought a deadly weapon to school and was being  expelled. I could hear
her crying in the background. It was just  unimaginable to me. Then I
realized it was my knife and I was so  relieved. I was thinking, this is
ridiculous, I'm going to fix this  and it's going to be over tomorrow."

But Twin Peaks Charter Academy--a private school that opened  last fall
under the domain of the public St. Vrain Valley School District--really did
mean to kick out Shanon. Under the Colorado  Safe Schools Act of 1993, any
student possessing a knife with a  blade of 3 inches or longer must be
expelled. "You can see why,"  Principal Dorothy Marlatt wrote in a letter
to all parents,  describing how "violence in the schools had been
hemorrhaging."  Before zero tolerance, she added, "school officials often
were  inconsistent and often capricious on how they dealt with weapons."

Student safety--and the future of Twin Peaks' charter--demanded  that the
law be strictly upheld. "They're so afraid, they're not  even exercising
normal, everyday, living skills," said Coslett,  sipping hot tea in her
kitchen on a recent evening, while Shanon  rounded up a dozen jars of
polish and focused on painting her nails.

She is back in class now, reinstated by the St. Vrain Valley  school board
after missing two days. "I'm not even in disagreement  with zero
tolerance," her mother said. "I mean, I understand that  there's a massive
breakdown in society, and it breaks my heart and  scares me to death that
there are 10-year-olds in gangs selling  crack. But this is Shanon--a
10-year-old honors student with a  kitchen utensil."

Knife in Lunchbox Lands Girl in Squad Car

Actually, Shanon was lucky. Two years ago, another honors  student, South
Carolina sixth-grader Charlotte Kirk, packed a knife  in her lunch box to
cut up a piece of leftover chicken. (Her parents  taught her not to eat
with her fingers.) She got hauled away in a  squad car.

"Zero tolerance is a simplistic political response to an  incredibly
complicated social issue," said Peter Blauvelt, president  of the
Maryland-based National Alliance for Safe Schools, a  nonprofit consulting
group run by former school security directors.  "It sells well. But, God,
we've already got rules upon rules upon  rules. We're paying our educators
to be decision-makers. Make the  goddamn decisions that have to be made!"

One of the reasons educators say they are reluctant to make  judgment calls
is the fear of liability. Suspending a student for  carrying a Tylenol may
seem severe. But what if that student shares  a tablet with another student
who has an allergic reaction? Then  parents--and lawyers--would be
demanding to know how the school  could have permitted their child to be
placed in such peril. In  1996, in the Northern California town of Antioch,
a jury awarded  $500,000 to a sixth-grader who sued her school for failing
to  protect her from lewd comments and sexual threats.

"You have administrators asking themselves: 'If I use good  sense, do I put
this school--and this budget--in jeopardy?' " said  Anne Bryant, executive
director of the National School Boards Assn.

And the threat of litigation goes beyond just the case at hand.  "It's the
next time, the precedent that you set," Bryant said. If an exception is
made for one child--say, a kid with a good academic record and an affluent,
politically connected family--what happens when a similar infraction is
committed by another kid from a more troublesome background? What happens
if one of the kids is a girl  and the other is a boy? Or if one is white
and the other is black?

"One parent's satisfaction," Bryant said, "is another parent's wrath."

But even when school districts try to be stern, things can  still end up a
mess. Consider the lessons of the Fairborn School  District near Dayton,
Ohio, where two middle-school girls were  busted in the fall of 1996 for
sharing a packet of Midol, a  nonprescription pain reliever that is usually
taken to ease  menstrual cramps.

The 10-day suspensions imposed on Erica Taylor, 13, and  Kimberly Smartt,
14, triggered a barrage of national publicity--much  of which referred
mockingly to the case as "MidolGate." After nine  days, the district agreed
to reinstate Erica, who cooperated by  attending a drug-and-alcohol
counseling program. But when the  superintendent decided to add an 80-day
expulsion to Kimberly's  sentence--because she had snatched the medicine
from the school  infirmary and offered it to Erica--her family hit the
district with  a federal lawsuit on the grounds of racial discrimination.

Kimberly is black; Erica is white, and the Smartt family argued  that no
other factor could adequately explain the disparity in their punishments. A
day after the suit was filed, the school board relented and let Kimberly
back in class. She arrived in a limousine. Suddenly, the outrage shifted.

"The girl is being treated like a hero for being a thief," the president of
the Fairborn Education Assn. complained to the Dayton Daily News.

A U.S. District Court judge eventually dismissed Kimberly's  claim of bias,
ruling that a school's need to provide a safe  environment outweighed a
student's right to possess even a  relatively harmless medication. But the
question remained: Did the  district overreact in the first place? Or was
it cowed at the end?

Erring on the Side of Caution

The answer, for many educators, is to err on the side of  caution. "It's
better that we appear too strict," said the district  spokesman in Smyrna,
"rather than the other way around." When the  rules are etched in stone,
even if they seem overly punitive, there  can be no mixed signals as to
what a school considers right and  wrong. That comforts the good kids,
administrators say, as much as  it deters the bad.

Foes of zero tolerance contend that the policy does more harm  than good,
mainly because it ignores the intent of the accused. That  is the basis of
another legal challenge, being weighed by the  Georgia Supreme Court, in
which a 15-year-old boy with a history of disciplinary problems was
sentenced to juvenile camp for carrying a small X-Acto knife, like the kind
used by art students. The boy's lawyer argued that authorities unfairly
equated possession with guilt, given that the blade is not inherently
malicious; it all depends on how it is used.

And therein, critics say, lies the real danger of zero  tolerance. When
educators fail to make distinctions--between a  weapon and a tool, or a
mind-altering narcotic and an  over-the-counter remedy--they run the risk
of undermining the very  anti-drug and anti-gun message that such policies
were designed to  communicate. "Zero tolerance is about coming down on kids
and taking  control away from them," said Myrna Shure, a psychologist at
Allegheny University in Philadelphia. "It teaches them that the  world is
mean, instead of teaching them to think about what they're  doing."

For some schools, there may be no choice, given the realities  of a modern
campus. But for some students, like Cosmo Zinkow, there  seems little to
gain from a lesson in fear instead of reason.

He and his family can think of many ways that Griffin Middle  School might
have handled the episode du vin somewhat more  constructively. Mrs.
Ellingsen could have politely refused the  wine--although other students
did see her open it--or she could have  kept it wrapped until she got home.
The principal could have held it  in the office and arranged for Cosmo's
parents to present it to her  after school hours. Or Bill and Connie Zinkow
could simply have been  called in for a parent-teacher conference, with a
gentle reminder  that alcohol is best kept out of the hands of a
13-year-old,  regardless of the circumstances.

A big teddy bear of a kid with rosy cheeks and tortoise-shell glasses,
Cosmo said the whole experience has left him sour. For one thing, he lost
two weeks of school and is worried about keeping up his grades. For
another, he smells hypocrisy.

"They told me that wine wasn't an appropriate gift," he said.  "But nobody
ever gave it back."

Times researcher Lianne Hart contributed to this story.

Copyright Los Angeles Times