A Texas school district's plan to track students with microchips
implanted in mandatory IDs has at least one parent charging it's an
invasion of his daughter's privacy.
Beginning in the middle of October, roughly 4,200 students at John
Jay High School and Anson Jones Middle School in San Antonio will be
required to wear the ID cards that utilize radio frequency
identification. The card, which will be worn on a lanyard around each
student’s neck, will transmit location information via microchip to
electronic readers throughout the campuses, Northside Independent School
District spokesman Pascual Gonzalez told FoxNews.com.
“It is like GPS in the school,” Gonzalez said. “As administrators, we
are charged with the safety of students in our schools. So within the
four walls of Jay High School and Jones Middle School during the school
day, we will always know where those kids are.”
The one-year pilot program, which will cost the district $261,000, is
also expected to increase attendance, and could bring an additional $2
million to the district in state funding as a result, said Gonzalez,
adding that the program will be reevaluated next summer.
“This allows us to quickly identify if any of those students reported
absent are, in fact, in the school,” Gonzalez said in reference to
students who may be elsewhere in the building during roll call. “And if
they are, we find them, get them to class and report them present.”
“This is non-threatening technology. This is not surveillance.”
- NISD spokesman Pascual Gonzalez
Parents have been “supportive” of the new program, Gonzalez said,
with the exception of one parent, Steven Hernandez, and his daughter
Andrea, both of whom participated in a protest against the technology.
“He is the lone protester,” Gonzalez said. “For us, this technology
represents an efficient way to locate a student and to always know where
our students are in our care.”
Attempts to reach Andrea Hernandez on Wednesday were unsuccessful,
but the John Jay sophomore told KSN.com she thinks many students will
rebel against the new policy by stashing the ID cards in their lockers.
“It makes me uncomfortable,” she told the website. “It’s an invasion of my privacy.”
Hernandez believes the system isn’t necessary because the district
already employs digital cameras in all high schools and middle schools.
She’s also worried what might happen if the technology gets hacked or
misused.
"With a smart phone you can use the option to use your locator, but this I can't turn it off," Hernandez said.
Other parents, meanwhile, have indicated they support the new program.
"You never know when a disaster is going to happen and to know where
your child is at least you have that card to know where your kid's at
all times," Michelle Esquivel told FOX 29.
Another parent, Ernest Castro, said the safety of his child is the utmost importance.
"I'm always worried about my daughter being at school," he told FOX 29.
In a
letter
to parents, John Jay High School administrators assured them that the
ID cards will store no personal information and that they’ll work only
on school grounds.
“Think how important this will be in the case of an emergency,” the
letter reads. “In addition, the ‘smart’ student ID card will be used in
the breakfast and lunch lines in the cafeteria and to check out books
from the library. Because all students will be required to wear their
‘smart’ ID, staff will be able to quickly identify Jay students inside
the school.”
Despite those assurances, a coalition of privacy and civil liberties
organizations and experts have called for a moratorium on the
technology, including the American Civil Liberties Union and Liz
McIntyre, author of "Spy Chips: How Major Corporations and Government
Plan to Track your Every Purchase and Watch Your Every Move."
"These tags are always on," McIntyre told FoxNews.com. "There's no off switch on these things."
McIntyre, who began studying the technology in 2002, said she's
primarily concerned with the electronic readers getting into the wrong
hands or for students to attempt to use them fraudulently, perhaps by
leaving them at school while being elsewhere.
"We're concerned that students could leave the tags in school and then leave," she said.
In a statement released last month, Dr. Katherine Albrecht, director
of Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering, warned
against an impending backlash against the technology, which is currently
in use only in two public school districts in Texas.
“Schools, of all places, should be teaching children how to
participate in a free democratic society, not conditioning them to be
tracked like cattle," Albrecht's statement read. "Districts planning to
use RFID should brace themselves for a parent backlash, protests and
lawsuits.”
Gonzalez rejected that criticism, saying the pilot program and the
“smart” ID cards have been used successfully in Houston’s Spring
Independent School District for at least the past five years.
“This is non-threatening technology,” he said. “This is not surveillance.”