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  • LA: School hate crimes spike

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    June 20 2005

    School hate crimes spike

    LAUSD police report that incidents have quadrupled in past decade

    By Naush Boghossian and Lisa M. Sodders, Staff Writers

    Hate crimes in Los Angeles' public schools have surged more than 300
    percent over the past decade -- the highest growth rate of all campus
    crimes, fueling concerns about racial tensions in the nation's
    second-largest school district.
    Nearly all of the 52 hate crimes reported in the 2003-04 school year
    were racially motivated, up from 12 in 1995-96, according to the
    latest figures available from Los Angeles Unified School District
    police.

    In recent months, officials have continued to grapple with
    race-related issues, including a spate of high-profile campus brawls
    at Jefferson and Taft high schools and an e-mailed threat of
    race-related gang violence that kept hundreds of kids out of dozens
    of schools.

    While some civic leaders fear that the tensions could spread into the
    broader community, school officials say it is simply a reflection of
    stresses that already exist in the community.

    "It's always been there, but schools are getting more diverse and
    ethnic tensions are growing and we have to deal with it. But there's
    so much ethnic conflict in the city. If we don't get together and
    talk about this in a responsible way, we're going to be the lesser
    for it," said Sheila Roth, student cabinet adviser at Taft High
    School, where fights in May prompted a massive police response and a
    campus lockdown.

    "And, what do you expect when you throw 3,700 kids in a school
    designed for 2,400?"

    Officials note that it's not just race-related incidents that are
    increasing. According to LAUSD crime statistics, weapons possessions
    rose 18 percent in the last three years, to 646 in 2003-04;
    robbery/extortion arrests rose 35 percent, to 345 last year;
    loitering/trespassing arrests increased by nearly 26 percent to 545.

    District officials attribute the increases partly to better
    reporting. But they also have moved to make school safety a priority.

    "I think there are some ethnic and cultural tensions, and those
    emanate in the community, oftentimes in the homes. It's a school's
    job to do the best they can to defuse that kind of attitude and
    that's what we have to work on and we have to work on it with other
    agencies," said LAUSD's Chief Operating Officer Dan Isaacs.

    "Our schools are much safer than the communities in which they rest,
    but we want to address the issues that occur in society and
    oftentimes spill over into our schools."

    Superintendent Roy Romer has authorized $3.7 million over three years
    to increase school police staff by 30, and $4.3 million to add more
    than 130 safety aides to assist with supervision programs at
    secondary schools.

    The district is working on a systemwide discipline policy and has
    established "safe zones" around some schools to combat gang violence.
    Efforts also are set for elementary and middle schools, where the
    district wants to teach students about cultural and ethnic
    sensitivities and how to resolve disputes better.

    LAUSD reflects a national trend of rising campus violence, said
    Delbert Elliott, director of the Center for the Study and Prevention
    of Violence at the University of Colorado.

    There were 48 reported school deaths -- including suicide and
    homicide -- in 2003-04 -- the highest number ever recorded, Elliott
    said. That compared with 17 in 2001-02 and 16 in 2002-03.

    The number of students involved and injured in fights also is up, as
    well as students being threatened or injured by a weapon.

    "It looks like we're seeing a reversal of trends. We saw a bottoming
    out in 2001, but there's not only more homicides, more fights, more
    injury, and carrying a weapon is going back up again," Elliott said.
    "The evidence is pretty clear that we're seeing escalating levels of
    violence at elementary and secondary schools. So something's going on
    that's creating very, very high rates of very serious violence."

    Overcrowding and increasingly diverse campuses are seen as key
    factors for the rising tensions, according to parents, teachers and
    students.

    The national average of students per teacher and counselor is 16 but
    in many LAUSD schools it's more than 25 students per teacher, said
    John Rogers, associate director of UCLA's Institute for Democracy,
    Education and Access.

    LAUSD is in the middle of a $14 billion construction program designed
    to ease overcrowding, but some schools still are bursting at the
    seams. California recommends 45 students per acre in secondary
    schools -- but many LAUSD high schools have many more, including
    Jefferson High with 206 students per acre.

    "The high rates of overcrowding in many schools in LAUSD and a number
    of other opportunities create a climate where there are no strong
    relationships between young people and adults like teachers and
    counselors," Rogers said. "And you're packing in so many students in
    one space, you're demanding young people to negotiate their personal
    space with others on an ongoing basis."

    Rogers believes a key to preventing such race-related tensions is to
    make the multiracial character of the student body part of what is
    studied at school and to get the community involved in leading by
    example.

    As officials wrestle with safety issues, some students say the fights
    have simply been random, with racial tensions not playing a
    significant role.

    Catalina Araneda, 18, of Grant High School said that after four years
    at the school, though, she may have just adjusted to the environment.

    She remembers when as a freshman she thought the tension was
    palpable, with Armenians and Latinos in their designated turfs on
    campus.

    "I don't know if I've grown accustomed to it, but I think if people
    actually take the time to get to know people, then there wouldn't be
    any tension," Araneda said. "I'm Hispanic and I have Armenian
    friends."

    But Grant freshman Sheldon Flores said he feels racial tensions are
    definitely growing.

    "More people of different races are coming to this school, and
    they're starting fights and stuff," said Flores, 15, who's black.

    School board President Jose Huizar believes the district has a
    responsibility to be better prepared to prevent large-scale fights.

    Ethnic tensions have always existed, but not at this intensity and
    frequency, Huizar said -- a problem that could spill into the
    community if left unchecked.

    "The bigger question is: Is this a prelude to what the city of Los
    Angeles will be facing in the next five to 10 years -- these same
    types of issues on the city streets?" Huizar said. "We need to help
    them deal with the issues at schools or the city has to prepare
    itself."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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