“Cops with no relationships with the children show up, and you’re more likely to get the kind of interaction between cops and children,” Principal Troy LaRaviere, who leads the Chicago Principals & Administrators Association, previously said. “The same kind of interaction you’re trying to prevent, you just created a situation where you’re more likely [to] get it.”
A largely unasked question is becoming glaring: Is Illinois doing all it should to use artificial intelligence to make government cost less and work better? So far, the evidence says no.