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Montgomery Blair High School's Online Student Newspaper
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Aug. 6, 2011

Balancing outrage and accountability

by Saaraa Farooq, Online News Editor
Montgomery County officials proposed a nighttime curfew for children 18 and under due to a recent gang fight in Downtown Silver Spring. The curfew was proposed on July 26 by County Executive Isiah Leggett and is intended to help police deal with the spread of gang violence in the County. The curfew would prohibit kids 18 and younger to be out after 11 p.m. from Sunday to Thursday and after midnight on Friday and Saturday. Teens and parents have opposed the curfew, claiming that it infringes on parental rights. Although this opposition may have a point, the parents of Montgomery County must acknowledge that they are partly at fault for the issue at the heart of the proposal: a lack of control over their children.

The proposed curfew will keep teens off Silver Spring streets at night in hopes of preventing gang violence. Courtesy of Dan Reed
The proposed curfew will keep teens off Silver Spring streets at night in hopes of preventing gang violence.
A consequence of violating the curfew may require not only the teenager to perform community service, but also force their parents to attend parenting classes. Involving the parents in the punishment holds them accountable for the actions of their child. This seemingly redundant discipline is because although it was their child who violated curfew, the parents were still supposed to be responsible for keeping track of their child. Whether the violation was due to teen rebellion or simply because the teen keeps their life a secret, ultimately, the parents are as much to blame as the child. Many may claim that they try to keep their kids inside, but the teen violence that sparked the curfew bill shows that there is still more parenting that can be done.

Parents claim that the curfew is infringing upon their rights, but it is questionable whether or not they have acted upon those rights. If the majority of parents actually exercised their authority, then we would not be in the position that we are now. A curfew may not have seemed necessary. The police and county officials should not be the ones forced to set the curfew, parents should take it upon themselves to set such limits for their children.

Parents, though, are not fully to blame, and just because some have not done their duty doesn’t mean that the rest must suffer the consequences. Their kids are equally at fault for breaking the law and deserve to be punished for their actions. However, a curfew is not the solution to stop teens who have already been breaking the law from doing whatever they want. According to the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, there were 6,318 arrests for every 100,000 youths ages 10 through 17 in the United States in 2008. The estimated amount of juvenile arrests in 2008 was 2,111,200. The teens who are caught will be dealt with by law enforcement, given a punishment and eventually end up back home - under the guidance of their parents who have not, and probably will not, set boundaries for them.

Though it may be hard for parents to say “no” to their children or deprive them from of getting what they want, it is for the child’s own good. If kids were allowed to do anything they wanted, then who is actually in charge, the child or the parent? Of course, setting limits for children will upset adolescents, but that is a lesson they have to learn and a major responsibility of being a parent. Therefore, boundaries must be set by parents, not by county officials. The law should not tell parents how to raise their kids, but kids should not be raising themselves either.

People are not wrong to protest the curfew bill and become outraged that county officials are telling them how to parent, but events such as the gang fight show that there needs to be a way to get a firmer grasp on dangerous adolescent behavior. The curfew bill may or may not be the right way to handle juvenile crime, but it is the County's way of keeping people safe.



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  • i don't even (View Email) on August 7, 2011 at 2:08 PM
    Coming back from hiatus to call SCO out on an op-ed that seems to do a complete 180 in the middle and end in an incoherent mess of a conclusion. The author seems to advocate for greater government involvement and stronger parenting... and then tells us that neither work. We end with a cliche comment on "good parenting" and an (entirely unnecessary) explanation of what the County is trying to do.

    Hey author - it's cool to be undecided. But talk about why you're undecided instead of listing all the other reasons why people are opinionated... and don't try to mask it in a topic sentence that's going to end up being entirely wrong by the end of the passage.

    Okay, I'm done being mean for today. Get better guys, please <3 At least it was a cute title.
    • Miles (View Email) on August 8, 2011 at 10:48 PM
      Hey. You have some valid points, but try and keep your comments a little more on the constructive side and a little less on the abrasive side. Not everyone's as pro at Op/Ed writing as you may be.
  • - insert creative name - on August 7, 2011 at 3:21 PM
    I'm trying not to be overly critical, but I feel like this simply doesn't address the core arguments that the opposition, that is almost entirely teens, not parents, has been making...
    read this
    http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=117757294984934
    and then rethink the issue you're actually addressing
  • just another teenager on August 9, 2011 at 1:11 AM
    I believe the police know what is best and a bunch of teenagers who don't know what gang activity even is should not be getting involved. Suck it up. Police are not going to be shoving kids into a police van coming out from the movies. We need to realize this is only being used to help.

    Also, maybe if programs were reinstated and we spent more time on that we wouldn't have a problem at all. Funding needs to be put more in those areas. Also the government should consider putting police officers on horses and/or bikes to go around downtown Silver Spring.

    Support our police no matter what.
    • ze popo (View Email) on August 10, 2011 at 10:49 PM
      The Fraternal Order of Police actually came out against this bill at the hearing. I think overall people agree that this curfew is just a dumb stopgap measure, and we should instead, as you mentioned, reinstate programs that *do* work and increase patrols in high-risk areas.

      However, blindly supporting any group is typically a bad idea... do your own research!
  • wow on August 11, 2011 at 1:31 AM
    is "just another teenager" a serious post?

    support our police no matter what? they don't support you. i hope you understand this. have you ever dealt with them? In their eyes, its "us vs them", and please believe that you are "them" to the police.

    Lots of things that have been intended to help in fact do a great deal of harm, and this is one of those times. An incredible restriction such as this is unnecessary and unfair. I am disheartened to see my alma mater putting out students so obviously unschooled on the values of freedom and liberty on which our nation is founded.

    Collective punishment is inherently unjust. If a teenager "doesn't even know what gang activity is", they certainly do not deserve to be punished for it. I wonder, does your line of thinking extend beyond teenagers? to other groups that have some bad apples? Arabs? Men? Blacks? Should we punish all members of these groups for the actions of individuals as well?

    ugh, just reading "support our police no matter what" gives me chills. scary days ahead if this is the future.
  • MoCo Teen on September 27, 2011 at 9:22 PM
    It true that gang related incidents could be reduced if parents of gang members placed restrictions on their children. However there are plenty of kids who are out late at night, not involved in gang related activities at all.

    Many parents aren't lacking control over their children. They communicate with their children, know where they are and what they are doing. If they trust their child to be out late, who is to say the child shouldn't be out?

  • Julianna on September 27, 2011 at 10:41 PM
    It true that gang related incidents could be reduced if parents of gang members placed restrictions on their children. However there are plenty of kids who are out late at night, not involved in gang related activities at all.

    Many parents don't lack control over their children. They communicate with their children, know where they are and what they are doing. If they trust their child to be out late, who is to say the child shouldn't be out?

  • Student on November 7, 2011 at 12:47 AM
    The above two comments are almost identical, sharing the same grammar errors....did someone just copy and paste the previous message ?
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