COLUMBIA,
S.C. (AP) - An attack on a North Charleston High School teacher last
month prompted Lowcountry lawmakers to craft a bill that would make
it a felony to assault school workers.
Also under the measure, sponsored by Sen. John Kuhn,
R-Charleston, teachers would have the right to bring criminal
charges against students - a power currently restricted to a
school's administration.
"I want to send a message to teachers that we back them up and a
very loud message to students that criminal activity will not be
tolerated," Kuhn said Thursday.
The legislation, co-sponsored by Sens. Arthur Ravenel, R-Mount
Pleasant, Larry Grooms, R-Bonneau, and Bill Branton, R-Summerville,
would make it a felony to assault any school worker on school
grounds or at a school-sanctioned event. Such an attack generally
would be considered a misdemeanor now.
Kuhn said he wants it spelled out in the law that teachers could
sue students.
In February, a 16-year-old student was given one year of
probation and 25 hours of community service after pleading guilty to
assault and battery after the boy attacked a social studies teacher.
Clare Heinsohn, a senior analyst for the Senate Education
Committee and former teacher in North Charleston, said educators in
Charleston are upset and outraged by the attack.
"I think the No. 1 tenet in a school is that every child should
feel safe, and certainly the teachers should feel safe, too,"
Heinsohn said.
Kuhn will hold a public hearing on the bill and the incident at
the new Judicial Center in Charleston on March 27.
Information from: The Post And Courier