FACTOID # 112: Don't start a company in Australia. More than 20% of the tax collected in Australia is corporate income tax.
 
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Zero tolerance is a strict approach to rule enforcement. It can be used as the basis of formal laws in a country or region, or in a smaller environment, such as a public school. As the name suggests, zero tolerance policies allow for absolutely no levels of tolerance or compromise for violators of the law in question. Punishment under such policies is unwaveringly severe.

Contents

Consequences

For example, if a school has a zero tolerance policy in regards to students carrying weapons, a student who brings a knife to school might be suspended instantly. Another such example would be the drug laws of nations such as Malaysia and Singapore, in which all drug dealers who are found guilty are executed.


When applied in public schools, where few to no due process or appeals rights are given to students, zero tolerance policies cause administrators to apply immediate and harsh punishment for even the most innocent of acts.


Public school examples

In the United States, hundreds of students have been suspended or expelled from school for being in possession of over-the-counter drugs such as aspirin or for seemingly innocent activities such as wearing particular clothes or drawing figures of military tanks and airplanes in their notebooks. For example:

  • In Colorado Springs, a 6 year old was suspended under the school's zero tolerance for drugs policy when the boy gave another student a throat lozenge.
  • In another Colorado case in Greeley, three boys faced expulsion under a zero tolerance for guns policy because they were seen playing with squirt guns.
  • In Canada, an 8 year-old boy was suspended from his Elementary School for pointing a breaded chicken finger at a classmate and shouting "Bang!" [1] (http://www.canoe.ca/CNEWSWeirdNews0105/31_kidgun-par.html).
  • In Alabama, an honors high school student was expelled just days before graduating for inadvertently leaving a rifle he used on a hunting trip in the back of his truck.
  • Another high school student was suspended days before graduation for having a butter knife in her car. It was inadvertently left there while helping her grandmother move. She didn't even know the knife was in the car, but she was barred from participating in the school's graduation ceremony.

Motivation

While it is traditionally the responsibility of administrators to consider each violation of policy and act accordingly, zero tolerance policies remove this responsibility and the accountability that goes along with it. Some cynical critics say that this is the reason for these policies being implemented. Others note that zero tolerance is easy to say in a sound bite, making it seem like you're doing something.


External links

  • "Losing my Tolerance for 'Zero Tolerance'" (http://www.thisistrue.com/zt.html) article by journalist Randy Cassingham on Zero Tolerance
  • Zero Intelligence (http://zerointelligence.net/) - Catalog and discussion
  • ZT Nightmares (http://www.ztnightmares.com/) - Case studies
  • End Zero Tolerance (http://www.endzerotolerance.com/) - Information
  • Parents Against Zero Tolerance (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PAZT) - Discussion group


See also: School discipline


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