|
|
Home :
Student Rights
:
General
Defense Department Reforms Student Military Recruiting Database to Settle NYCLU Lawsuit (1/9/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org NEW YORK - In an
agreement to settle a lawsuit brought by the New York Civil Liberties Union on
behalf of several high school students, the Department of Defense today
announced major changes to its database of information about high school
students, which is used for military recruitment efforts. The changes will
protect the privacy of American high school students and give students and their
families more tools to exempt themselves from aggressive military recruitment in
their schools and their homes, the NYCLU said. "The students who
brought this lawsuit stood up for the privacy rights of all American high school
students," said Donna Lieberman, NYCLU Executive Director. "Our job now is to
spread the word that young people who don't want to be harassed by the military
must do a 'double opt-out' - by both telling the Defense Department that they
want out of the database and telling their high schools not to provide the
military with their contact information." The NYCLU filed the
lawsuit after the DoD's Billion-dollar Joint Advertising and Market Research
Studies (JAMRS) military recruitment program began collecting, maintaining and
distributing the personal and private information of millions of high school
students in a rogue database. Under today's settlement, the DoD
will: stop disseminating student information to law enforcement,
intelligence or other agencies and instead limit use of the JAMRS database to
military recruiting;
- limit to three years the length of time that DoD retains
student information;
- stop collecting student Social Security Numbers;
and,
- establish and clarify procedures by which students can block the
military from entering information about them in the database and have their
information removed.
Announced in 2005, the DoD's massive database
flouted restrictions passed by Congress in a 1982 law intended to balance the
promotion of military recruitment with the protection of students' privacy.
Lawmakers specified that the DoD must keep the information private and use it
only for military recruiting purposes, must store the information for no more
than three years and must collect only basic contact and educational
information. In direct contrast, in its database JAMRS allowed the information
to be disseminated widely to law enforcement, intelligence and other agencies,
kept the information for five years and aimed to collect a wide variety of
private and personal information about every American high school student,
including ethnicity and social security numbers. "Today's
changes to the JAMRS database represent an acknowledgement by the military that
they do not have carte blanche to recruit without respect for the privacy of
students and their families," said Corey Stoughton, an NYCLU Staff Attorney and
lead counsel in the case. "It's refreshing to see the Defense Department
recognize that it is not above the law." Hope Reichbach
contacted the NYCLU when she was a student at Hunter College High School in
Manhattan and became a plaintiff in the lawsuit after trying and failing to have
her name removed from the lists and databases that have subjected her to
repeated phone calls from military recruiters. "I got involved in this lawsuit
because I just wanted the military to leave me and other students alone,"
Reichbach said. "I feel like we sent that message, and the DoD stood up and
listened." Despite undertaking these major changes, the DoD refuses
to stop collecting information about students' race and ethnicity. According to
the NYCLU, the DoD's resistance likely stems from the military's ongoing efforts
to target racial and ethnic minorities, especially from African-American and
Latino communities, for aggressive recruitment campaigns. The NYCLU
filed the case, Hanson et al. v. Rumsfeld et al., in the Southern District of
New York on April 24, 2006. Named defendants included Donald Rumsfeld, in his
official capacity as then-United States Secretary of Defense and other DoD
personnel. NYCLU Associate Legal Director Christopher Dunn was co-counsel on the
case. More information about the settlement and the lawsuit, as
well as opt-out forms for students and their families, is available online at: http://milrec.nyclu.org The DoD
has published an announcement of the changes to the database in a privacy notice
in the Federal Register available online at: www.nyclu.org/pdfs/revised_notice.1.9.07.pdf
|
|
|