Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Meanwhile....in California,

Does anyone know what happened to this idea?


Students ordered to wear tracking tags
Parents protest school mandate on RFID badges
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6942751/

Dawn and Mike Cantrall's daughter, a seventh-grader at Brittan Elementary School, poses at her Sutter, Calif., home, wearing the RFID tag mandated by her school.
By Lisa Leff

Updated: 8:02 p.m. ET Feb. 9, 2005
SUTTER, Calif. - The only grade school in this rural town is requiring students to wear radio frequency identification badges that can track their every move. Some parents are outraged, fearing it will rob their children of privacy.

The badges introduced at Brittan Elementary School on Jan. 18 rely on the same radio frequency and scanner technology that companies use to track livestock and product inventory.

While similar devices are being tested at several schools in Japan so parents can know when their children arrive and leave, Brittan appears to be the first U.S. school district to embrace such a monitoring system.

Civil libertarians hope to keep it that way.
"If this school doesn't stand up, then other schools might adopt it," Nicole Ozer, a representative of the American Civil Liberties Union, warned school board members at a meeting Tuesday night. "You might be a small community, but you are one of the first communities to use this technology."

The system was imposed, without parental input, by the school as a way to simplify attendance-taking and potentially reduce vandalism and improve student safety. Principal Earnie Graham hopes to eventually add bar codes to the existing ID's so that students can use them to pay for cafeteria meals and check out library books.
But some parents see a system that can monitor their children's movements on campus as something straight out of Orwell.

"There is a way to make kids safer without making them feel like a piece of inventory," said Michael Cantrall, one of several angry parents who complained. "Are we trying to bring them up with respect and trust, or tell them that you can't trust anyone, you are always going to be monitored and someone is always going to be watching you?"

Cantrall said he told his children, in the 5th and 7th grades, not to wear the badges. He also filed a protest letter with the board and alerted the ACLU.
CONTINUED:

3 comments:

Green-Eyed Momster said...

Those badges sound like "Big Brother" to me. I could have used one as a kid but nobody cared where I was or what I was doing. I don't believe kids these days would stand for it. It's one thing to have "On-Star" in your vehicle, another, to have it on your kid! That's just my opinion!

Thanks for your comment and I am taking you up on your offer. I will be mailing you our address. Thank you so much, in advance! I appreciate you! I wish you could coach his team next year. There's an ad in our local paper for the Golf Team Coach position. My hubby is considering it but he already has a full time job.

Thanks again! I'll mail the letter out tomorrow!

Kind Regards, T

Ned Vare said...

Traceytreasure,

Just email me your address at nedvare@ntplx.net

Ned

Fiery said...

It's not about protection, it's about instilling fear and control. It's about getting children accustomed to living in a police state and accepting limitations on their freedoms for their own "protection".