Illinois Lawmakers Ban Police From Ticketing And Fining Students For Minor Infractions In School
from the of-course-the-cops-don't-like-it dept
This story was originally published by ProPublica & the Chicago Tribune. Republished under ProPublica’s CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.
Illinois legislators on Wednesday passed a law to explicitly prevent police from ticketing and fining students for minor misbehavior at school, ending a practice that harmed students across the state.
The new law would apply to all public schools, including charters. It will require school districts, beginning in the 2027-28 school year, to report to the state how often they involve police in student matters each year and to separate the data by race, gender and disability. The state will be required to make the data public.
The legislation comes three years after a ProPublica and Chicago Tribune investigation, “The Price Kids Pay,” revealed that even though Illinois law bans school officials from fining students directly, districts skirted the law by calling on police to issue citations for violating local ordinances.
“The Price Kids Pay” found that thousands of Illinois students had been ticketed in recent years for adolescent behavior once handled by the principal’s office — things like littering, making loud noises, swearing, fighting or vaping in the bathroom. It also found that Black students were twice as likely to be ticketed at school than their white peers.
From the House floor, Rep. La Shawn Ford, a Democrat from Chicago, thanked the news organizations for exposing the practice and told legislators that the goal of the bill “is to make sure if there is a violation of school code, the school should use their discipline policies” rather than disciplining students through police-issued tickets.
State Sen. Karina Villa, a Democrat from suburban West Chicago and a sponsor of the measure, said in a statement that ticketing students failed to address the reasons for misbehavior. “This bill will once and for all prohibit monetary fines as a form of discipline for Illinois students,” she said.
The legislation also would prevent police from issuing tickets to students for behavior on school transportation or during school-related events or activities.
The Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police opposed the legislation. The group said in a statement that while school-based officers should not be responsible for disciplining students, they should have the option to issue citations for criminal conduct as one of a “variety of resolutions.” The group said it’s concerned that not having the option to issue tickets could lead to students facing arrest and criminal charges instead.
The legislation passed the House 69-44. It passed in the Senate last month 37-17 and now heads to Gov. JB Pritzker, who previously has spoken out against ticketing students at school. A spokesperson said Wednesday night that he “was supportive of this initiative” and plans to review the bill.
The legislation makes clear that police can arrest students for crimes or violence they commit, but that they cannot ticket students for violating local ordinances prohibiting a range of minor infractions.
That distinction was not clear in previous versions of the legislation, which led to concern that schools would not be able to involve police in serious matters — and was a key reason legislation on ticketing foundered in previous legislative sessions. Students also may still be ordered to pay for lost, stolen or damaged property.
“This bill helps create an environment where students can learn from their mistakes without being unnecessarily funneled into the justice system,” said Aimee Galvin, government affairs director with Stand for Children, one of the groups that advocated for banning municipal tickets as school-based discipline.
The news investigation detailed how students were doubly penalized: when they were punished in school, with detention or a suspension, and then when they were ticketed by police for minor misbehavior. The investigation also revealed how, to resolve the tickets, children were thrown into a legal process designed for adults. Illinois law permits fines of up to $750 for municipal ordinance violations; it’s difficult to fight the charges, and students and families can be sent to collections if they don’t pay.
After the investigation was published, some school districts stopped asking police to ticket students. But the practice has continued in many other districts.
The legislation also adds regulations for districts that hire school-based police officers, known as school resource officers. Starting next year, districts with school resource officers must enter into agreements with local police to lay out the roles and responsibilities of officers on campus. The agreements will need to specify that officers are prohibited from issuing citations on school property and that they must be trained in working with students with disabilities. The agreements also must outline a process for data collection and reporting. School personnel also would be prohibited from referring truant students to police to be ticketed as punishment.
Before the new legislation, there had been some piecemeal changes and efforts at reform. A state attorney general investigation into a large suburban Chicago district confirmed that school administrators were exploiting a loophole in state law when they asked police to issue tickets to students. The district denied wrongdoing, but that investigation found the district broke the law and that the practice disproportionately affected Black and Latino students. The state’s top legal authority declared the practice illegal and said it should stop.
Filed Under: citations, fines, illinois, police, police in schools, school resource officers, tickets




Comments on “Illinois Lawmakers Ban Police From Ticketing And Fining Students For Minor Infractions In School”
Anyone else read that as something like “if you don’t let us beat up the kids regularly, then we’ll take the gloves off and really start mauling them”
Re:
It does seem to read as “if we can’t punish them lightly you force us to punish them heavily”
Seems like the gang bangers with badges just want to punish children for fun.
WHO DISCRIMINATES?
It’s been found that school officials and police are 2x as likely to try and ruin the lives of PoC kids and those with disabilities.
This isn’t an Illinois problem. It’s letting unthninking asshats handle those who will one day elect more asshats like them.
Racist asshats aren’t just enshifitying schools. Some of them look orange, hire Fox “talent” to run the country, and can’t put a sentence or a real lock of hair together coherently.
Re:
What do you think about the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in Gaza as a response to the October 7 Attacks, jackass?
LMAO
More more…
Please make me laugh..
So, idiots call other idiots, WHO did not see the situation, tell the 2nd idiot to Give the kid a Ticket?
HE CANT give a ticket cause he did not see the incident. It can goto court, with the principle, but the odds are HE didnt see it either.. So you now grab the teacher who saw it?? And have 3-5 people in court to PROVE and Show that this kid Said a bad word in Public?
PLEASE give me more/.
Re: Another one for you
A Person in charge of FEMA, does not know the USA has a Hurricane season…
LOL
i was quite impressed to also see “resource officers” (honestly, how the actual fuck do they come up with this jargon dreck) covered by the law.
Just weird
View from the other side of the Atlantic: the fact that you have police, armed police, in schools is really weird.
Re:
From an American: The fact that we got to a point where we felt police were needed in schools is a symptom of a much larger disease called “U.S. gun culture” that came into sharp focus with the Columbine massacre and hasn’t gotten any better since.
Re: Re: Correlation?
Cant find any logic to the school shooting, most of them any way.
As a Teen Adult Shoots up a grade school??
What ever happened to Free Gun locks?
Why arnt there Parents watching over the kids to see Whats happening to them?
Its time to get pigs out of schools
And make school administrators do their jobs again.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
A lot of departments use a computer where you use a stylus to sign, no paper ticket
If they are using that the parents could break in to that computer network and erase it because it is on a computer and no paper ticket
Re:
Don’t you have anything better to do than to encourage lawbreaking?
Re: Re:
Obviously not, otherwise this dipshit wouldn’t be channeling Trump.