The Columbus Institute of Contemporary Journalism (CICJ) has operated Freepress.org since 2000 and ColumbusFreepress.com was started initially as a separate project to highlight the print newspaper and local content.
ColumbusFreepress.com has been operating as a project of the CICJ for many years and so the sites are now being merged so all content on ColumbusFreepress.com now lives on Freepress.org
The Columbus Freepress is a non-profit funded by donations we need your support to help keep local journalism that isn't afraid to speak truth to power alive.
But when Shea-Keneally insisted on an explanation, she was in for an even
bigger surprise: The recruiters cited the No Child Left Behind Act,
President Bush's sweeping new education law passed earlier this year.
There, buried deep within the law's 670 pages, is a provision requiring
public secondary schools to provide military recruiters not only with
access to facilities, but also with contact information for every student
-- or face a cutoff of all federal aid.
"I was very surprised the requirement was attached to an education law,"
says Shea-Keneally. "I did not see the link."
The military complained this year that up to 15 percent of the nation's
high schools are "problem schools" for recruiters. In 1999, the Pentagon
says, recruiters were denied access to 19,228 schools. Rep. David Vitter, a
Republican from Louisiana who sponsored the new recruitment requirement,
says such schools "demonstrated an anti-military attitude that I thought
was offensive."
To many educators, however, requiring the release of personal information
intrudes on the rights of students. "We feel it is a clear departure from
the letter and the spirit of the current student privacy laws," says Bruce
Hunter, chief lobbyist for the American Association of School
Administrators. Until now, schools could share student information only
with other educational institutions. "Now other people will want our
lists," says Hunter. "It's a slippery slope. I don't want student
directories sent to Verizon either, just because they claim that all kids
need a cell phone to be safe."
The new law does give students the right to withhold their records. But
school officials are given wide leeway in how to implement the law, and
some are simply handing over student directories to recruiters without
informing anyone -- leaving students without any say in the matter.
"I think the privacy implications of this law are profound," says Jill
Wynns, president of the San Francisco Board of Education. "For the federal
government to ignore or discount the concerns of the privacy rights of
millions of high school students is not a good thing, and it's something we
should be concerned about."
Educators point out that the armed services have exceeded their recruitment
goals for the past two years in a row, even without access to every school.
The new law, they say, undercuts the authority of some local school
districts, including San Francisco and Portland, Oregon, that have barred
recruiters from schools on the grounds that the military discriminates
against gays and lesbians. Officials in both cities now say they will grant
recruiters access to their schools and to student information -- but they
also plan to inform students of their right to withhold their records.
Some students are already choosing that option. According to Principal
Shea-Keneally, 200 students at her school -- one-sixth of the student body
-- have asked that their records be withheld.