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Small town succeeds where Chicago fails

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She ticked through the names. "This boy saw his dad get shot. This one is living with grandma. This one's family lost their home. Every kid has their story," she said.

One fourth-grader on her list missed a total of two months last year. Zimmerman telephoned his house, grabbed her keys and quickly recounted the reasons behind the boy's chronic truancy as she strode to her car: The child and his mother were living in a shelter, then they moved in with relatives. But nobody is getting along or ensuring the child gets to school.

Zimmerman drove past low-rise housing developments and grimy trailers with extension cords running to the homes next door. When she pulled up to a sagging wood-frame home, a chatty, bespectacled boy was waiting on the front lawn.

As he scrambled into Zimmerman's car, the outreach worker questioned his mother about how she would get him to school the next day, and the day after that.

On the drive to Steele, the youngster was elated. "School is my favorite thing," he told the truancy officer.

As he bounded into the building in an oversized Scooby Doo T-shirt, Zimmerman said she'll make a drive like that when she has to, but she refuses to be a taxi service and won't hesitate to ticket the parents of chronic truants or send them to court.

"I am not looking to be politically correct or be your friend," Zimmerman said. "I would like your kid to see that there is another way to live."

Punishing parents

The debate over whether or how to hold parents accountable for truancy in the earliest grades has spread across the country and divided communities.

In recent months, for example, the Los Angeles School Police Department says it has dramatically reduced the number of citations issued to truant students and instead is referring the youth to counseling and other services.

But about 25 miles south in Long Beach, the city prosecutor last year announced that he would begin hauling the parents of chronically truant students in grades K-8 into court. In cases where that happened, the youths' average number of unexcused absences dropped by half, city officials say, even though none of the cases progressed beyond a pre-court conference.

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