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Advocates push for changes to Baker Act policy in Palm Beach County schools

Police officer speaking with a young student in the hallway.
Joshua Polson
/
The Greeley Tribune via AP
In this file photo, a police officer talks with a student while visiting Meeker Elementary in Greeley, CO.

Disability rights advocates want the School District of Palm Beach County to do more to protect students from being inappropriately detained under the , formally known as the .

That鈥檚 after the district agreed to pay $440,000 to resolve a claiming school officials were misusing the Baker Act on children with disabilities.

The state law allows for people to undergo a psychiatric evaluation against their will 鈥 including 鈥 if they represent an imminent danger to themselves or others because of their mental illness.

Too often, the law is misused against like , according to the advocacy organization Disability Rights Florida.

Ann Siegel is the legal director for DRF, one of the groups that brought the against the SDPBC back in 2021.

鈥淢any of the students that have been Baker Acted over these years have been students with developmental disabilities,鈥 said Siegel. 鈥淎nd we believe that's an inappropriate use as the statute is specifically designed for people with mental health issues.鈥

READ MORE: Thousands of Florida students involuntarily committed under Baker Act

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon issued a final judgment in the case on July 5, ordering the SDPBC to pay out nearly half a million dollars to students and family members who brought the case.

The plaintiffs say they represented hundreds of kids who had been detained in recent years, some as young as five years old.

鈥淎lthough [the plaintiffs] and hundreds of other children like them were treated like criminals, they were not charged with a crime,鈥 the plaintiffs argued in a legal filing. 鈥淭he overwhelming majority of these children did not need or benefit from involuntary examination and were deeply traumatized by the experience. Once sent for an examination, children wait hours or days in a psychiatric facility, also known as a 鈥渞eceiving facility,鈥 without their parents, for an examination by a clinician.鈥

School board considers policy changes, following lawsuit 

In the wake of the lawsuit, the Palm Beach County school board is considering changes to the district鈥檚 on responding to student mental health crises.

A district spokesperson did respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit or the policy proposal.

According to a district memo, the policy updates are in response to 鈥渟takeholder input and legislative updates.鈥

"The School Board recognizes it must take steps to ensure that all students are provided resources, proactive mental health, and behavioral health strategies to have access to a safe, supportive education," the policy reads in part. "All students are to be treated with respect and dignity by District personnel."

During a July 19 , the school board gave initial approval to the policy changes, passing the proposal unanimously as part of the consent agenda.

Siegel says the proposed changes don鈥檛 go far enough to adequately protect children from the harms of being Baker Acted 鈥 which for many kids entails being taken into custody by police and detained overnight in a facility meant for people much older than they are. It鈥檚 an experience that for many children is traumatizing 鈥 and for some is from being thrown in jail.

鈥淭hese are students with disabilities. And they are most vulnerable to the trauma of being handcuffed by police and taken away from their school and their family to a hospital,鈥 Siegel said. 鈥淎nd oftentimes the parents are not notified ahead of time.鈥

READ MORE: Florida's severe child psychiatrist shortage keeps one provider in Miami-Dade up at night

Disability Rights Florida is also pushing for better training to help school staff and law enforcement officers properly assess which children truly meet the statutory requirements for involuntary commitment 鈥 and to ensure meaningful alternatives are in place to avert a crisis.

鈥淲e really think that if there is an issue where a student seems to be in crisis, we would like the school district to reach out to the parents and have the parents assist in de-escalating,鈥 Siegel said. 鈥淲e feel that oftentimes, having family intervention along with the school utilizing appropriate de-escalation techniques will help rectify the situation and will negate the need for any type of involuntary commitment.鈥

Misuse of Baker Act a statewide concern, advocates say 

Previous reporting shows that the SDPBC is by no means the only place where children with disabilities are being Baker Acted; Palm Beach County schools simply collected data at a time when other districts didn鈥檛, Siegel said.

Still, a 2020 by WFSU detailed how children with disabilities are increasingly being swept into the mental health system across the state.

The 2021 analysis by the SPLC found that involuntary examinations of Florida children have risen significantly in recent years; between fiscal year 2001-2002 and fiscal year 2018-2019, the percentage of children who were Baker Acted increased by 150 percent. Children of color have been disproportionately affected, data show.

Still, Siegel says the SDPBC has been open to considering advocates鈥 recommendations and proposed reforms.

鈥淲e don't want students traumatized further. And we believe that the district鈥檚 moving in the right direction,鈥 Siegel said. 鈥淲e just want to work with them to ensure that the progress continues and that the number of students who are subjected to Baker Act go down substantially.鈥

Kate Payne is WLRN's Education Reporter. Reach her at kpayne@wlrnnews.org
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