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  • Pasadena: Racial tensions shadow school's achievements

    Pasadena Star-News, CA
    April 29 2004

    Racial tensions shadow school's achievements
    Marshall principal fighting accusations of insensitivity

    By Gretchen Hoffman , Staff Writer

    PASADENA -- A year ago, Marshall Fundamental High School was one of
    three schools in the nation to receive the College Board's
    Inspiration Award in recognition of its work in helping economically
    disadvantaged students go to college. It is the Pasadena Unified
    School District's highest-scoring high school on state standardized
    tests, and parents overwhelmingly choose Marshall when applying
    through the district's open-enrollment process.

    But tensions have been building at the school, which serves sixth
    through 12th-graders. Last month, a fight between African- American
    and Armenian students spilled over, resulting in a lockdown and
    several students being cited by PUSD police. Some parents say they
    are afraid for students' safety.

    An Armenian administrator has been fired, and his lawyer is
    threatening a lawsuit, saying Principal Steven Miller is the person
    who should be removed.

    And a group of community members is circulating a petition calling
    for Miller's removal, claiming that he is a bigot who is
    systematically purging the school of African-Americans.

    Some Armenian parents were upset when middle school dean Kevork
    Halladjian was notified that he will not return to his position next
    year. They say that he was the only school administrator who listened
    to parents concerned about rumors of further violence before the
    March 5 fights.

    Miller has been criticized for his handling of the fights, with
    detractors saying he is ill- equipped to handle racial tensions
    because he is culturally insensitive at best.

    However, many parents, students and school officials have repeatedly
    denied that the fights were racially motivated but were merely fights
    between individuals.

    Halladjian's lawyer, Dale Gronemeier, said he is laying the
    groundwork for a lawsuit if Halladjian is not reinstated.

    Gronemeier is married to Marshall's high school dean, Temetra
    Gronemeier, who had a lawsuit pending against the school district
    alleging she was discriminated against because of her age. She was
    seeking the principal position, which was instead given to Miller.

    The lawsuit was rejected by a judge last week.

    The lawyer said that in a deposition taken for that lawsuit, Miller
    admitted asking district officials to remove Temetra Gronemeier from
    her administrative position at Marshall, a request that was denied.

    She and Halladjian are a symbol of African Americans and Armenian
    Americans working together cooperatively at a time when Marshall is
    undergoing a racial crisis, Dale Gronemeier said.

    In an April 15 letter to Superintendent Percy Clark, Dale Gronemeier
    warned of disastrous consequences for Miller and said he plays
    hardball and is prepared for a public battle.

    "There has been a systematic attempt by Miller to purge the African
    Americans from the security force at Marshall,' Gronemeier claimed
    Wednesday. "Because Halladjian would not go along with illegal
    practices, Miller wanted to fire him.

    "At a minimum, Miller is racially insensitive and the alternative is
    that he's bigoted,' Gronemeier added.

    Miller said the allegation that Halladjian was given a pink slip
    because he refused to fire a security guard does not make sense,
    since district officials do all hiring and firing at the high school.
    The opposition comes from people who would have targeted whoever took
    the principalship two years ago, he said.

    Teachers describe Miller as calm, fair, personable and a good
    listener. He commands respect but becomes even more soft-spoken than
    usual when talking about the allegations of bigotry.

    "From the very first week that I arrived here, there were threats,
    there were warnings,' Miller said. "I've dealt with slander,
    intimidation. I've been subjected to these twisted perversions of
    lies. When I'm called a racist, I get emotional, because it's
    slander.

    "On three different occasions, publicly I've been told that I'm going
    to be driven out of Pasadena. It's getting to a point where I'm
    starting to worry about (my) safety. What's going on here is an
    agenda that has nothing to do with these kids.

    "What I found was that every time Marshall demonstrates success, then
    the intimidation, the aggression escalates,' Miller said. "Right now
    ... the focus is on me but it's really about destroying the school.'

    District officials said Miller's supporters far outnumber his
    detractors.

    "Steve has the unqualified support of the superintendent and his
    staff,' PUSD spokesman Erik Nasarenko said. " Steve is an exemplary
    school leader who we are fortunate to have in this district.'

    Miller said he is committed to leading the school despite the threats
    and lies but that he will leave if the conflict begins to affect
    student achievement.

    "I think it becomes too much when I start to see students being
    negatively impacted, and I think (my detractors) know that about me,'
    Miller said. "They know that's ammunition.'

    Altadena resident John Wright is one of the people who have been
    handing out petitions calling for Miller's removal. Miller lacks the
    sensitivity to deal with a multi-ethnic student body and has
    alienated members of the community with his biased attitude, the
    petition states.

    "He thinks that African Americans should have an appointment with him
    as opposed to having an open-door policy with Caucasians,' Wright
    said, adding that he has not met personally with Miller. Wright has
    no children or grandchildren at the school.

    "I'm just a concerned citizen and feel there's got to be someone who
    will stand up and be a voice for the African-American community,'
    Wright said. "I'm not boxing it in as an African- American principal,
    but what we need is a person over there who has the children's
    welfare at heart and who has the sensitivity to deal with a
    multi-ethnic campus.'

    Roy Sunada, who has been teaching at Marshall for 12 years, said
    Miller has had a calming effect at the school since he took over in
    the midst of chaos caused by scheduling problems.

    "I believe it's turning into a personal attack,' Sunada said. "He's
    absolutely not racist or a bigot. To say that really trivializes the
    seriousness of racism. His detractors have no sense of shame and no
    sense of decency.'

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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