Author Topic: Flashback: In California, Kamala Harris pushed law that threw parents in jail if  (Read 529 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Ptarmigan

  • Bunny Slayer
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 23594
  • Reputation: +927/-225
  • God Hates Bunnies
Flashback: In California, Kamala Harris pushed law that threw parents in jail if kids were truant
https://justthenews.com/government/state-houses/flashback-california-kamala-harris-pushed-law-threw-parents-jail-if-kids

Quote
While a state-level official in California years ago, presumptive Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris championed a series of policies that threatened parents with jail time if their kids missed too much school, with several parents eventually ending up in jail under a statewide statute.

Harris first proposed a local initiative during her 2004-2011 tenure as San Francisco District Attorney. "Parents who are continually reluctant to send their children to school are subject to fine or imprisonment," Harris's office said in an informational brochure on the policy.

A subsequent state-level truancy law sponsored by Harris was passed in 2010. That law threatened parents with $2,000 in fines and up to a year imprisonment if their child was a "chronic truant."

Kamala Harris proposed a truant law to jail parents for repeat truancy.

Quote
That law resulted in numerous parents being sentenced to jail stretches, including one mother who was jailed for six months under the law.

Harris, meanwhile, has since claimed that the jailing of parents was an "unintended consequence" of the state law, though the jail provisions were intrinsic features of both the original San Francisco policy and the subsequent statewide law.

Criminalizing parents of truant children "certainly was not the intention — never was the intention," Harris said lat year.

She needs to explain this.
Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.
-Napoleon Bonaparte

Allow enemies their space to hate; they will destroy themselves in the process.
-Lisa Du