Tech tools check up on school visitors

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NEW LENOX – Want to visit your child's teacher or volunteer in a classroom?

Then you need to hand over your driver's license for a quick background check in order to obtain a pass complete with photo and date as you enter the halls of any school in New Lenox School District 122.

Just a few weeks ago, the district installed the new security system, which scans a driver's license and within seconds determines if the visitor is listed on the national Sex Offender Registry and Violent Offender Against Youth Database.

The New Lenox district is among the first in the south suburbs to adopt this technology, following in the steps of Homewood-Flossmoor High School, which launched the system last year.

Visitors not flagged are issued a photo ID badge, good for only that day. The system stores the license information so returning volunteers only have to provide their name - which is rerun through the database - to get a new ID badge.

"You may not be a sex offender today but may be tomorrow," said Jason Livezey, District 122's director of technology. "It's important we do this to make sure we ID people who are coming into our schools."

But it's only done when students are in the building, not during after-school events such as basketball games, he said.

District communications coordinator Jenny Zimmerman said: "We have 5,700 students and 600 staff members. This is an added step to keep everyone safe. No one has direct access to the students."

Offenders who are spotted would be escorted out of the building, Livezey said. If they resist, police would be called. If a parent is on the list, board policy states the parent only is allowed to attend parent-teacher conferences and may be supervised.

Is the new security system too extreme?

Ed Yohnka, of the American Civil Liberties Union's Illinois office, said he has seen similar systems installed in other schools.

"The most important thing to know is that they do not collect too much information and that they do not store the information for longer than necessary. They should dump all the day's information at the end of the day and not create a record of who entered the school," he said via e-mail. "No technology will be a magic bullet."

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