Fulton County Schools – 蜜桃影视 America's Education News Source Thu, 26 May 2022 15:54:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Fulton County Schools – 蜜桃影视 32 32 Schools Bought Security Cameras to Fight COVID. Did it Work? /article/from-face-mask-detection-to-temperature-checks-districts-bought-ai-surveillance-cameras-to-fight-covid-why-critics-call-them-smoke-and-mirrors/ Wed, 30 Mar 2022 11:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=587174 This story is part of a series produced in partnership with exploring the increasing role of artificial intelligence and surveillance in our everyday lives during the pandemic, including in schools.

When students in suburban Atlanta returned to school for in-person classes amid the pandemic, they were required to cover their faces with cloth masks like in many places across the U.S. Yet in this 95,000-student district, officials took mask compliance a step further than most. 

Through a network of security cameras, officials harnessed artificial intelligence to identify students whose masks drooped below their noses. 


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鈥淚f they say a picture is worth a thousand words, if I send you a piece of video 鈥 it鈥檚 probably worth a million,鈥 said Paul Hildreth, the district鈥檚 emergency operations coordinator. 鈥淵ou really can鈥檛 deny, 鈥極h yeah, that鈥檚 me, I took my mask off.鈥”

The school district in Fulton County had installed the surveillance network, by , years before the pandemic shuttered schools nationwide in 2020. Under a constant fear of mass school shootings, districts in recent years have increasingly deployed controversial surveillance networks like cameras with facial recognition and gun detection.

With the pandemic, security vendors switched directions and began marketing their wares as a solution to stop the latest threat. In Fulton County, the district used Avigilon鈥檚 鈥淣o Face Mask Detection鈥 technology to identify students with their faces exposed. 

During remote learning, the pandemic ushered in a new era of digital student surveillance as schools turned to AI-powered services like remote proctoring and in search of threats and mental health warning signs. Back on campus, districts have rolled out tools like badges that track students鈥 every move

But one of the most significant developments has been in AI-enabled cameras. Twenty years ago, security cameras were present in 19 percent of schools, according to . Today, that . Powering those cameras with artificial intelligence makes automated surveillance possible, enabling things like temperature checks and the collection of other biometric data.

Districts across the country have said they鈥檝e bought AI-powered cameras to fight the pandemic. But  as pandemic-era protocols like mask mandates end, experts said the technology will remain. Some educators have stated plans to leverage pandemic-era surveillance tech for student discipline while others hope AI cameras will help them identify youth carrying guns. 

The cameras have faced sharp resistance from civil rights advocates who questioned their effectiveness and argue they trample students鈥 privacy rights.

Noa Young, a 16-year-old junior in Fulton County, said she knew that cameras monitored her school but wasn鈥檛 aware of their high-tech features like mask detection. She agreed with the district鈥檚 now-expired mask mandate but felt that educators should have been more transparent about the technology in place.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 helpful for COVID stuff but it seems a little intrusive,鈥 Young said in an interview. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 strange that we were not aware of that.鈥

鈥楽moke and mirrors鈥

Outside of Fulton County, educators have used AI cameras to fight COVID on multiple fronts. 

In Rockland Maine鈥檚 Regional School Unit 13, officials used federal pandemic relief money to procure a network of cameras for contact tracing. Through advanced surveillance, the cameras by allow the 1,600-student district to identify students who came in close contact with classmates who tested positive for COVID-19. In its , Verkada explains how districts could use federal funds tied to the public health crisis to buy its cameras for contact tracing and crowd control. 

At a district in suburban Houston, officials spent nearly $75,000 on AI-enabled cameras from , a surveillance company owned in part by the Chinese government, and deployed thermal imaging and facial detection to identify students with elevated temperatures and those without masks. 

The cameras can screen as many as 30 people at a time and are therefore 鈥渓ess intrusive鈥 than slower processes, said Ty Morrow, the Brazosport Independent School District鈥檚 head of security. The checkpoints have helped the district identify students who later tested positive for COVID-19, Morrow said, although has argued Hikvision鈥檚 claim of accurately scanning 30 people at once is not possible. 

鈥淭hat was just one more tool that we had in the toolbox to show parents that we were doing our due diligence to make sure that we weren鈥檛 allowing kids or staff with COVID into the facilities,鈥 he said.  

Yet it鈥檚 this mentality that worries consultant Kenneth Trump, the president of Cleveland-based National School Safety and Security Services. Security hardware for the sake of public perception, the industry expert said, is simply 鈥渟moke and mirrors.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 creating a fa莽ade,鈥 he said. 鈥淧arents think that all the bells and whistles are going to keep their kids safer and that鈥檚 not necessarily the case. With cameras, in the vast majority of schools, nobody is monitoring them.鈥

鈥榊ou don鈥檛 have to like something鈥

When the Fulton County district upgraded its surveillance camera network in 2018, officials were wooed by Avigilon鈥檚 AI-powered 鈥淎ppearance Search,鈥 which allows security officials to sift through a mountain of video footage and identify students based on characteristics like their hairstyle or the color of their shirt. When the pandemic hit, the company鈥檚 mask detection became an attractive add-on, Hildreth said.

He said the district didn鈥檛 actively advertise the technology to students but they likely became aware of it quickly after students got called out for breaking the rules. He doesn鈥檛 know students鈥 opinions about the cameras 鈥 and didn鈥檛 seem to care. 

鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 probably as much interested in their reaction as much as their compliance,鈥 Hildreth said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to like something that鈥檚 good for you, but you still need to do it.鈥

A Fulton County district spokesman said they weren鈥檛 aware of any instances where students were disciplined because the cameras caught them without masks. 

After the 2018 mass school shooting in Parkland, Florida, pitched its cameras with AI-powered 鈥済un detection鈥 as a promising school safety strategy. Similar to facial recognition, the gun detection system uses artificial intelligence to spot when a weapon enters a camera鈥檚 field of view. By identifying people with guns before shots are fired, the service is 鈥渓ike Minority Report but in real life,鈥 a company spokesperson wrote in an email at the time, referring to the that predicts a dystopian future of mass surveillance. During the pandemic, the company rolled out thermal cameras that a company spokesperson wrote in an email could 鈥渁ccurately pre-screen 2,000 people per hour.鈥

The spokesperson declined an interview request but said in an email that Athena is 鈥渘ot a surveillance company鈥 and did not want to be portrayed as 鈥渟pying on鈥 students. 

Among the school security industry鈥檚 staunchest critics is Sneha Revanur, a 17-year-old high school student from San Jose, California, who founded to highlight the dangers of artificial intelligence on civil liberties. 

Revanur said she鈥檚 concerned by districts鈥 decisions to implement surveillance cameras as a public health strategy and that the technology in schools could result in harsher discipline for students, particularly youth of color. 


Sneha Revanur

Verkada offers a cautionary tale about the potential harms of pervasive school surveillance and student data collection. Last year, when a hack exposed the live feeds of 150,000 surveillance cameras, including those inside Tesla factories, jails and at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. The Newtown district, which suffered a mass school shooting in 2012, said compromising information about students. The some educators from contracting with the California-based company. 

After a back-and-forth with the Verkada spokesperson, the company would not grant an interview or respond to a list of written questions. 

Revanur called the Verkada hack at Sandy Hook Elementary a 鈥渟taggering indictment鈥 of educators鈥 rush for 鈥渄ragnet surveillance systems that treat everyone as a constant suspect鈥 at the expense of student privacy. Constant monitoring, she argued, 鈥渃reates this culture of fear and paranoia that truly isn鈥檛 the most proactive response to gun violence and safety concerns.鈥 

In Fayette County, Georgia, the district spent about $500,000 to purchase 70 Hikvision cameras with thermal imaging to detect students with fevers. But it and disabled them over their efficacy and Hikvision鈥檚 ties to the Chinese government. In 2019, the U.S. government , alleging the company was implicated in China鈥檚 鈥渃ampaign of repression, mass arbitrary detention and high-technology surveillance鈥 against Muslim ethnic minorities.

 The school district declined to comment. In a statement, a Hikvision spokesperson said the company 鈥渢akes all reports regarding human rights very seriously鈥 and has engaged governments globally 鈥渢o clarify misunderstandings about the company.鈥 The company is 鈥渃ommitted to upholding the right to privacy,鈥 the spokesperson said. 

Meanwhile, Regional School Unit 13鈥檚 decision to use Verkada security cameras as a contact tracing tool could run afoul of in Maine schools. The district didn鈥檛 respond to requests for comment. 

Michael Kebede, the ACLU of Maine鈥檚 policy counsel, cited recent studies on facial recognition鈥檚 flaws in and and called on the district to reconsider its approach. 

鈥淲e fundamentally disagree that using a tool of mass surveillance is a way to promote the health and safety of students,鈥 Kobede said in a statement. 鈥淚t is a civil liberties nightmare for everyone, and it perpetuates the surveillance of already marginalized communities.鈥

Security officials at the Brazosport Independent School District in suburban Houston use AI-enabled security cameras to screen educators for elevated temperatures. District leaders mounted the cameras to carts so they could be used in various locations across campus. (Courtesy Ty Morrow)

White faces

In Fulton County, school officials wound up disabling the face mask detection feature in cafeterias because it was triggered by people eating lunch. Other times, it identified students who pulled their masks down briefly to take a drink of water. 

In suburban Houston, Morrow ran into similar hurdles. When white students wore light-colored masks, for example, the face detection sounded alarms. And if students rode bikes to school, the cameras flagged their elevated temperatures. 

鈥淲e鈥檝e got some false positives but it was not a failure of the technology,鈥 Hildreth said. 鈥淲e just had to take a look and adapt what we were looking at to match our needs.鈥

With those lessons learned, Hildreth said he hopes to soon equip Fulton County campuses with AI-enabled cameras that identify students who bring guns to school. He sees a future where algorithms identify armed students 鈥渋n the same exact manner鈥 as Avigilon鈥檚 mask detection. 

In a post-pandemic world, Albert Fox Cahn, founder of the nonprofit , worries the entire school security industry will take a similar approach. In February, educators in Waterbury, Connecticut, a new network of campus surveillance cameras with weapons detection. 

鈥淲ith the pandemic hopefully waning, we鈥檒l see a lot of security vendors pivoting back to school shooting rhetoric as justification for the camera systems,鈥 he said. Due to the potential for errors, Cahn called the embrace of AI gun detection 鈥渞eally alarming.鈥 

Disclosure: This story was produced in partnership with . It is part of a reporting series that is supported by the which works to build vibrant and inclusive democracies whose governments are accountable to their citizens. All content is editorially independent and overseen by Guardian and 74 editors.

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Wealthy Neighborhood Seeks Split from Atlanta, Leaving Parents in Limbo /article/a-wealthy-enclave-seeks-split-from-atlanta-and-parents-take-sides-over-their-schools-future/ Tue, 08 Feb 2022 18:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=584442 Updated February 14

Georgia lawmakers have halted, at least for now, the Buckhead neighborhood鈥檚 effort to secede from the rest of Atlanta.聽On Friday, House Speaker David Ralston joined other Republicans in opposing legislation that would have allowed residents in the affluent community to vote on cityhood this fall.聽

Caren Solomon Bharwani has lived her entire life in Buckhead, an exclusive Atlanta enclave known for stately homes set back from dogwood-lined streets and upscale shopping on Peachtree Road.

Her kids have enjoyed Atlanta鈥檚 school offerings, including the popular International Baccalaureate program, and she鈥檚 formed tight bonds with educators providing services to her two children with disabilities.


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That could be upended, however, if a vocal segment of Buckhead鈥檚 mostly white and wealthy population achieves its goal to secede from the city. Georgia law doesn鈥檛 allow the neighborhood to form its own school district. Secession, therefore, would leave 5,500 students and 800 employees in the neighborhood鈥檚 eight schools in limbo; unless legislation passes to keep them in the Atlanta Public Schools, they鈥檇 be subsumed by the surrounding Fulton County school system. 

Bharwani said she 鈥渄esperately鈥 fears losing the support her children receive if the neighborhood secedes.

Andrew and Caren Soloman Bharwani and their three children. The Bharwanis are opposed to Buckhead becoming a separate city. (The Bharwani family)

Proponents of a Buckhead breakaway 鈥 including many with school-age children 鈥 complain of rising crime, neglected potholes and an encroaching homeless population. But opponents view the effort as and legally shaky. Buckhead, which is 86 percent white, generates an estimated $230 to $300 million in property taxes that is used to fund education. As with similar secession efforts across the country, the proposal has the potential to siphon off revenue from the region鈥檚 more affluent families, leaving residents in Atlanta鈥檚 majority Black district with fewer resources.

鈥淩esidential secession movements, typically driven by wealthier white communities, are almost always bad for education,鈥 said Richard Kahlenberg, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, a left-leaning think tank. If Buckhead is allowed to secede, 鈥渃oncentrations of poverty will increase in Atlanta, making students left behind worse off. The tax base necessary to support Atlanta public schools will suffer.鈥

The move comes as the district continues to grapple with persistent inequities. A from the Latino Association for Parents of Public Schools estimated it would take more than a century for Black students to catch up with their white peers in reading and math.

The issue has divided neighbors and policymakers, and presented newly elected with one of the first major challenges of his tenure. It is already one of the most contentious issues before state lawmakers this year. At least two secession bills await action, and more could be introduced before the session ends.

Members of Neighbors for a United Atlanta, a group opposed to Buckhead cityhood, participated in a park clean-up on New Years Day. (Neighbors for United Atlanta)

鈥楻ight to vote鈥

Bill White, a former Democrat-turned-Trump-fundraiser who chairs the Buckhead City Committee, insists he鈥檚 not trying to weaken the Atlanta district鈥檚 tax base. 

He promises that final legislation will specify that students can remain in their schools and the Atlanta district will hold on to its share of the property tax revenue Buckhead generates. He advises Atlanta鈥檚 district leaders 鈥 who 鈥 to stick to their mission. 

鈥淚nstead of attempting to interfere with Buckhead鈥檚 70,000 citizens鈥 absolute right to vote on its own destiny, we hope [Atlanta Public Schools] will focus all its attention, resources and capabilities on the singular and much more important goal of providing higher quality education for our beloved children,鈥 he said in a statement.

But many are skeptical of White鈥檚 promises to ensure stability for neighborhood students.

Mikayla Arciaga, a former Atlanta Public Schools teacher who lives in Buckhead and ran unsuccessfully for the school board last year, accused proponents of 鈥渂affling overconfidence.鈥

鈥淚t might be sorted out,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut we鈥檙e talking about our kids, who have already experienced two years of education disruption.”

Supporters of the cityhood movement turned out in October for the grand opening of the Buckhead City Committee鈥檚 headquarters. (Buckhead City Committee)

White and other proponents argue that becoming a city would allow them to take public safety and other services into their own hands. Once a rural getaway for Atlanta鈥檚 old-money families, Buckhead was annexed into Atlanta in 1952. But Buckhead, like the city as a whole, has faced a recent that has put residents on edge.

A pro-cityhood sign in the yard of a Buckhead home. (Judith Fuller)

last summer showed rates of robberies, aggravated assaults and car thefts were higher in Buckhead than citywide. But Atlanta鈥檚 mayor recently to open a new neighborhood police precinct and in January, a new police captain for the area said the community was starting to see a decline in .

Some parents support secession despite the uncertainty over Buckhead鈥檚 schools. Meredith Bateman, who has two children at Atlanta Classical Academy, a charter school, is among them.

A Buckhead resident since 2002, Bateman said she no longer feels safe in her community and is careful about where she stops to get gas. In 2020, a man pointed a gun at her husband and daughter during a moment of road rage on a residential street. She doesn鈥檛 allow her daughter, now 15, to go to Lenox Square 鈥 the area鈥檚 high-end shopping mall 鈥 by herself.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 not normal. She should be getting some independence,鈥 Bateman said. 鈥淕one are the days of saying, 鈥業鈥檒l drop you at the mall, and I鈥檒l pick you up later.鈥欌

鈥楾wo years of education disruption鈥

Opponents of secession say there are too many unanswered questions. Among them: What will happen to the district鈥檚 buildings and employees if the students become part of the Fulton schools. Atlanta school board member Michelle Olympiadis said it鈥檚 possible Fulton would buy out or lease the buildings. Employees would be displaced and have to reapply for positions.

鈥淲hat teachers are going to want to stay through that turmoil?鈥 Arciaga asked. 

But she agrees city services could improve. Some parks, she said, haven鈥檛 been maintained in years, leaving residents to pick up trash and remove broken tree limbs. 

Another complication is that the proposed city limits drawn up by the Buckhead City Committee don鈥檛 match current school attendance zones: Left out are the more diverse neighborhoods on the edges.

On the left is the current North Atlanta cluster of schools. On the right is a map of the proposed city limits of Buckhead. (Atlanta Public Schools; Buckhead City Committee)

鈥淢agically, the areas they鈥檝e not included tend to be the higher minority areas,鈥 said Keisha Burgess Prentiss, who has a fifth grader at Bolton Academy and a younger child entering pre-K this fall.

She moved to the area specifically to enroll her children in the district鈥檚 International Baccalaureate and dual language Spanish immersion programs. But the elementary school her older daughter attends is outside the proposed boundaries, while the middle and high school lie within. If Buckhead becomes a city and the schools join the Fulton district, her children would no longer be eligible to attend. 

Leila Laniado, a proponent of secession, is confident her daughter will be able to remain in the Atlanta district. As a Hispanic woman, she rejects the notion that residents want to keep out minorities.

鈥淓very time people bring race into the discussion, it’s done purposely to divide,鈥 she said.

Fulton officials, meanwhile, have mostly stayed quiet as their legal team weighs potential scenarios. One possibility is that the two districts reach an agreement in which students living in Buckhead remain in the Atlanta district, said spokesman Brian Noyes. 

But he added that officials have avoided the debate and don鈥檛 want to 鈥渟pend a lot of energy around what-ifs.鈥

E. Rivers Elementary is located in Buckhead but some of the school鈥檚 students don鈥檛 reside within the boundaries of the proposed city. (Judith Fuller)

Not the first attempt

For now, supporters and opponents are fixing their attention on the state legislature. Four Republican lawmakers from outside Buckhead introduced bills in support of secession, but that doesn鈥檛 mean state GOP leaders are unified on the issue. Former U.S. Sen. , who is challenging Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp in the May primary, is in favor of a referendum on cityhood, while Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan is opposed. House Speaker David Ralston hasn鈥檛 taken a stand. 

In a move some predicted would kill the effort, Duncan assigned one of the bills related to secession to an . There hasn鈥檛 been any action on the issue since mid-January, but those on either side expect they won鈥檛 know the outcome until the session ends March 31.

Duncan argues that rising crime is not unique to Buckhead and stems from racial unrest and the pandemic. Secession, he says, won鈥檛 solve the problem and would leave Atlanta with fewer financial resources to prevent crime.

鈥淐riminals will still find their way to Buckhead despite the change in mailing address,鈥 he wrote in an .

There have been in Buckhead, but they didn鈥檛 reach the legislature. A 2008 newsletter arguing in favor of a breakaway lamented that the community鈥檚 taxpayers were 鈥渟imply tired of having our votes and money taken for granted by the City of Atlanta.鈥

Olympiadis, the Atlanta school board member, thinks the current effort has more momentum. If cityhood proponents are successful, she fears, other wealthy parts of the city, such as Midtown, will follow suit.

If the issue gets through the legislature and wins at the polls, Bharwani, an organizer of opposition group Neighbors for United Atlanta, expects the matter to wind up in court, with families hanging in the balance until it鈥檚 settled. The cityhood committee can 鈥渨rite in their bill that [Atlanta Public Schools] has to continue educating the kids,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut there鈥檚 no provision in Georgia law that allows for any of this to happen.鈥

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