Lehla Gaulden tried to avoid using the bathroom at school last year. She felt uncomfortable encountering groups of teens crowded in the stalls, passing around a vape pen. This year, however, she's just accepted it as a part of being a high schooler.
"It's normalized — you go in the bathroom and just expect people to be vaping," said Gaulden, a junior at Southwest High in Minneapolis.
The habit vexes school administrators across Minnesota who are constantly trying to stop students from missing class to vape in bathrooms or locker rooms. About 14% of high school juniors and 6% of eighth graders across the state reported using e-cigarettes in the last 30 days, according to the 2022 Minnesota Student Survey. That percentage is down from previous years, but educators are worried that vaping both nicotine and THC products has continued to become socially acceptable among teens.
Last school year, Minneapolis Public Schools logged 252 incidents of vaping, resulting in 176 suspensions.
The district is soliciting bids to add vape detectors in hard-to-monitor areas — such as bathrooms — at five schools that had the highest rates of reported vaping incidents last year. The district also aims to add licensed drug and alcohol counselors to those schools: Washburn, Roosevelt and Henry high schools and Anwantin and Andersen middle schools.
"Students who are engaging in these behaviors are missing class time because they feel they need to vape," said Meghan Hickey, Minneapolis Public Schools' executive director of student support services. And a suspension means they miss even more instruction, she said.
The new drug and alcohol counselors, paid for by a $500,000 federal grant over three years, will try to shift the focus from discipline to intervention and support to break patterns of behavior and address addictions.
The detectors, which typically look like smoke alarms, are meant to deter students from vaping in bathrooms and locker rooms. Some Minneapolis schools have kept certain bathrooms locked as an extreme measure to try to prevent vaping — a move that received pushback from students worried about limiting bathroom access.