Lawmakers Consider Restrictions On High School Recruiting
Lawmakers Consider Restrictions On High School Recruiting
By Susan Haigh
Associated Press
HARTFORD (AP) â Bernadette Conroy was shocked to pick up the phone last year and find that a US Army recruiter wanted to speak to her 16-year-old son.
âMy son was just a junior at the time and not even in possession of a driverâs license yet. Wasnât shaving yet. I was still driving and picking him up from football practice and to the movies with his friends,â the Newington mother told the legislatureâs Education Committee on Monday.
âAnd here was this man trying to get him to enlist during wartime,â she said.
Representative Andrew Fleischmann, the committee co-chairman, said heâs heard from other families who feel military recruiters are targeting young, impressionable teens, in hopes of meeting their recruitment goals.
Fleischmann, D-West Hartford, has proposed a bill that requires each school board in the state to have a policy of prohibiting the recruitment, military or otherwise, of any student under 15 years old unless the recruiter has permission from the studentâs parent or guardian.
The bill also requires recruiters to set up appointments with individual students through the schoolâs guidance office, and make sure that parents and their teens know that it is a voluntary decision to meet with a recruiter.
Additionally, the bill requires schools to notify students and parents that they can opt out of the military recruiting process. At Mondayâs public hearing, some people testified that they didnât know about the opt out option.
Major Nathan Banks, a spokesman for the US Army, said Army recruiters play by the rules and provide teens with general guidance and knowledge about the military.
âAn individual cannot join the military unless heâs 18 years of age to sign on his own,â Banks said. The military does accept 17-year-olds with a high school diploma or GED, but only the teenâs parent or guardian gives consent.
âOnce you get into the contract phase, definitely a parent is going to be present,â he said.
Chris Grohs, a medic in Iraq and Afghanistan and current University of Connecticut student, said his recruitment experience was positive, but heâs heard from others in the military who were given a lot of promises that didnât come true.
âIt seems a lot of people were misled by their recruiter and a lot of people ended up not getting what they were told they were going to get,â he said.
Grohs urged lawmakers to limit recruitersâ access to high schools. The state is obligated to provide the same access to military recruiters at schools thatâs provided to other recruiters, such as universities and employers.
âItâs kind of like letting the fox in the hen house. You have recruiters â their sole goal is to make that quota,â Grohs said. âAnything you can do for parents to say, âNo I donât want my child to have their information accessible by a recruiterâ is definitely a very good thing.â