Program will allow state and federal agencies to access student records
Kit Daniels
Infowars.com
January 27, 2014
New York’s new, multi-agency surveillance program will collect data on public
school students from preschool to their entry into the workforce and potentially
throughout their entire lives.
Developed by the New York State Education Department, funded by the federal
government and promoted by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the P-20
data collection program allows government entities to share and access records
for every student in the state with the overall goal of monitoring individuals
from childhood to death.
“By working in collaboration with other state agencies, the New York State
Education Dept. will be able to establish a P-20 data system without duplication
of effort and cost,” a U.S. Dept. of Education web
site states. “It will allow NYSED and other agencies to link data without
the need for agencies to unnecessarily add new regulations or seek legal
policies to collect data out of their purview.”
“In the end, it will provide a more robust state data system.”
New York began development of the P-20 program as early as 2008 and has
received over $40 million in federal and state grants since then, according to
USA Today.
The program was named P-20 to indicate the tracking of students from
pre-kindergarten to around age 20 when they enter the workforce.
“Data is painting a profile of a student that is richer and more valuable
than ever before,” Jim Shelton, a U.S. Education Department official who
previously worked for the Gates Foundation, said recently.
He also added that the P-20 program leads to “progress.”
Others, however, have pointed out the obvious privacy issues and Orwellian
characteristics of this data collection.
“This throws up so many red flags for me as a parent, a tech guy and an
educator,” technology training specialist Brian Wasson said to USA Today. “As this develops, will they decide to use this
data for more than research?
“I don’t buy the rationale for it.”
The real reason behind the program is to integrate personal records held by
various government departments into a centralized database which can then be
shared and accessed by a multitude of state and federal agencies.
The idea for such a database existed as far back as 2002 when the New
York Times reported that the Pentagon wanted to analyze Americans’
educational, criminal, financial, medical, and travel records in order to
profile every citizen in the country.
This goal came to fruition in the past year when the Dept. of Health and
Human Services rolled out the Federal Data Services Hub, a comprehensive database which
provides federal entities real-time, electronic access to dossiers on Americans
compiled with information from the IRS, the Dept. of Homeland Security, the
Justice Dept. and others.
No doubt that the records collected under the P-20 program will also
eventually appear in this data hub.
Monday, January 27, 2014
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