Posts Tagged ‘ district ’

Entire Staff At L.A. School To Be Removed During Scandal Probe

February 7, 2012

LOS ANGELES — The entire staff at an elementary school where two teachers were arrested on suspicion of lewd conduct will be removed while the school district investigates, the Los Angeles school superintendent said Monday night. Superintendent John Deasy told parents and media that 88 teachers and 40 support staff at Miramonte Elementary School are being replaced because a full investigation of allegations is disruptive and staffers will require support to get through the scandal. An entire staff has been trained to come into Miramonte’s classrooms to take over teaching for the time being, and there will be a psychiatric social worker in every classroom to help students and staff cope with any issues. “The last thing I’m worried about is a budget issue,” Deasy said. “The No. 1 thing I’m worried about is the students.” All employees will be paid during the investigation, district spokesman Tom Waldman said. Officials didn’t know how long the investigation will take. School officials canceled classes at the school on Tuesday and Wednesday as a cooling-off period, Waldman said. All current staff members will report to another location, where they will be interviewed, he said. Deasy emphasized that all staff members being brought into the classroom went through a “very rigorous screening process.” Deasy told reporters after the meeting that he was trying “to govern emotion, because that’s important.” United Teachers Los Angeles said in a statement that union leaders and staff have met with instructors at Miramonte. “We support a thorough, vigorous and fair investigation of all allegations,” the statement said. “It’s everyone’s responsibility to ensure that any and all allegations are thoughtfully and carefully investigated.” Maria Jimenez, 51, said the parents of children enrolled at Miramonte are divided over the move. “Some are in favor. Others are against it because they did this without advising us or consulting us,” she said. The move follows the arrest of two Miramonte teachers: Mark Berndt was charged last week with committing lewd acts on 23 children; Martin Springer was arrested Friday on suspicion of fondling two girls in his classroom. More than a quarter of the students at Miramonte were absent from school Monday while parents demanded more protection at the school, with attendance reaching just 72 percent, according to figures from the Los Angeles Unified School District. About three dozen parents and supporters protested in front of the main doors of the school earlier Monday, some carrying a banner that read, “We the parents demand our children be protected from lewd teacher acts.” The protest was an unusual event in the poor, overwhelmingly Latino neighborhood, where many parents and students struggle with the English language. Many people finally gathered around former state senator-turned-lawyer Martha Escutia, who lectured them in Spanish about how to organize for the media and suggested a catchy name for their fledgling movement: Mothers of Miramonte. As night fell, about 100 angry parents marched from the elementary school to the nearby meeting with administrators. School police watched and sheriff’s deputies were on hand, but there was no violence. Berndt, who worked at the school for 32 years, was charged with committing lewd acts on 23 children, ages 6 to 10, between 2005 and 2010. The acts cited by authorities include blindfolding children and feeding them his own semen in his classroom in what children were allegedly told was a tasting game. Berndt, 61, remains jailed on $23 million bail and could face life in prison if convicted. Springer, 49, was arrested on suspicion of fondling two girls in his classroom. He was being held on $2 million bail. Springer taught at Miramonte for his entire career, which started in 1986, the district said. He taught second grade. The school board is scheduled to discuss firing him in a closed-door meeting Tuesday. Investigators said they know of no connection between the Miramonte cases. Berndt and Springer know each other and took their classes on at least two joint field trips in the past decade, according to the Los Angeles Times. The district set up a toll-free hotline on Monday to receive reports of suspected abuse at Miramonte, said school board President Monica Garcia in a statement. Garcia added that the district would step up efforts to ensure students and staff realized the importance of reporting misconduct. In the same school district, a janitor at a San Fernando Valley elementary school was arrested on suspicion of committing a lewd act with a child on a campus. Paul Adame, 37, was taken into custody after a mother told police on Sunday that he had inappropriate contact with her child during school hours Friday at Germain Elementary School in the Chatsworth area north of Los Angeles, police Capt. Kris Pitcher said at a news conference. The captain declined to provide details but urged anyone who might know of other possible victims to contact police. Adame was booked and released on $100,000 bail Monday. It could not be immediately determined if he had an attorney. There was no immediate connection between the arrest of the janitor and the cases at Miramonte, which is 15 miles away in an unincorporated county area of South Los Angeles. ____ Associated Press writer Raquel Maria Dillon contributed to this report. Read the original here: Entire Staff At L.A. School To Be Removed During Scandal Probe

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Record Air Pollution Slams California’s Ag Heartland

January 25, 2012

FRESNO, Calif. — This is the time of year when residents who often live with the nation’s worst pollution often can draw a breath of fresh air. But this winter has not been kind to people who want to play outside in California’s Central Valley. A dry December and January has stagnated air across California, but nowhere is the situation more serious than between Modesto and Bakersfield, where nearly every day dirty air has exceeded federal health standards. It’s the worst air quality recorded in a dozen years, and it’s the unhealthiest kind_ microscopic, chemical-laden particles that can get into lungs and absorbed into the bloodstream to create health risks in everyone, not just the young and infirm. The southern San Joaquin half of the valley stretches 200 miles from Stockton to Bakersfield and is home to 4 million people. It traditionally records the highest level of particulate matter and ozone pollution in the United States and has a rate of asthma three times the national average, according to the American Lung Association. Air quality advocates have argued for years that the local air district’s focus on fireplace burn bans ignores other major sources of industrial pollution, such as dairies, feed lots and oil rigs. “The air board’s strategy is failing,” said Kevin Hall, executive director of the Central Valley Air Quality Coalition. Air officials say their policies are sound, but there is little they can do with La Nina conditions in the Pacific creating stagnant air. Fighting air pollution in the Central Valley is a task that so far has not succeeded in meeting federal health standards. Surrounded on three sides by mountains, the valley opens in the north toward San Francisco and Sacramento, where weather patterns suck emissions south. Cutting through the valley are the state’s two main north-south highway corridors, the routes for nearly all long-distance tractor trailer rigs, the No. 2 source of particulate pollution in the valley. Also in the mix are millions of acres of plowed farmland and 1.6 million dairy cows and the flatulence and ammonia-laden manure they create. Without wind and rain, the air sits, trapped as if in a pot with a lid. Since 2003, the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District has targeted fireplace soot as biggest source that is easiest to end and calls “no burn days” based on weather forecasts. Fires were banned on nearly every day in December, including Christmas Eve and New Year’s, and the 60 people who patrol neighborhoods writing citations to offenders have been busy. Violations doubled in some areas and were up to five times higher in others last month as the district cracked down during unseasonably cold weather. “When we have weather conditions like this, there is nothing we can do really to meet the federal standards,” said Seyed Sadredin, executive director of the district. “Even if we shut down I-5 and (U.S. Highway) 99 and shut businesses we would still violate the standard because there’s no dispersion. The best we can do is to minimize the damage, and the best way to do that is with the fireplace rule.” The struggle with particulate pollution comes after the district failed during the summer months, despite a publicity campaign, to keep ozone emissions under EPA limits to avoid ongoing federal fines. Warnings about the potential adverse health effects of air pollution become a year-round event in the valley. And those warnings are about to start coming more furiously. This week district officials lowered by nearly half the level of pollution they say is safe for outdoor activities. The air district helped fund a study of 1 million residents in 2011 that found that emergency room visits for asthma and heart attacks went up when particulate pollution went up. That convinced officials that the federal government’s standard, which relied on a 24-hour average of air quality, was too high. Small particulates in the bloodstream can break off plaque in the coronary artery, creating a logjam and a heart attack. “The old level may work for Beijing, China, but we need to bring it down to where it really belongs,” said David Lighthall, the district’s health science adviser. “We are recognizing that the air quality is different from one time of day to another and we’re trying to give people the information they need to make decisions about outdoor exercise.” The district sends advisories to schools and those signed up for email alerts, called “Real Time Outdoor Activity Risk” warnings, whenever the air reaches the “unhealthy” level so that teachers know whether to call off recess and residents can decide to postpone a jog or a bike ride. On Friday morning, for instance, some Fresno residents received an email alert at 10 a.m. working that the air was “Level 5 Very Unhealthy” for everyone, indicating the highest levels of pollution. “We can give people a tool, whether an athlete or school manager, and ensure they do stay indoors at particular times when air quality is threatening, and also find out when a better time to go out would be,” Lighthall said. Just before Christmas, the Center for Race, Poverty and the Environment sued the U.S. EPA on behalf of Central Valley residents alleging it has not pressed California for a viable, enforceable plan to improve air quality. “We are going to need far tighter rules coming out of the air district if we are really going to make progress in meeting federal standards,” said Tom Franz of the Bakersfield-based Association of Irritated Residents, one of the groups suing. Air pollution officials say the technology doesn’t yet exist to lessen the valley’s pollution and bring the region into compliance, though the district is investing in research and giving grants for things such as the new generation of battery powered leaf blowers and lawn mowers. ______ Twitter: (at)TConeAP See the article here: Record Air Pollution Slams California’s Ag Heartland

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BHUSD Faces Clean-up of Raw Sewage Under Hawthorne School

January 24, 2012

After months of complaints about a foul odor permeating the auditorium of Hawthorne School , officials discovered in November that a broken sewer line had created a pool of human waste soaking into the soil beneath the building. The busted line was capped soon after the discovery, but the Beverly Hills Unified School District is now beginning the process of hiring a contractor to clean up the mess—the full extent of which has yet to be determined. At its meeting Tuesday night, the Board of Education is expected to start the bidding process to hire a company to remove the soil contaminated by the raw sewage. Hawthorne workers discovered the broken sewer line while searching for the source of the auditorium odor. They located a 15-foot stretch of tunnel under the building where human waste from the school’s bathrooms had been leaking from an old pipe. “Pipes break, unfortunately,” said Alex Cherniss, the district’s assistant superintendent for business services. “When pipes break in areas that are not accessible or not easily seen, it’s hard to know when and where it happened. The odor tipped us off.” School staff began complaining about a stench coming through the auditorium vents last spring. The odor was initially attributed to Hawthorne’s aging sewer injection pump, which has a history of emitting bad smells throughout the building and was replaced in late December, according to Cherniss, who served as Hawthorne principal from 2005-08. However, no complaints had ever been made about an odor in the auditorium when he was there, he said. Cherniss, BHUSD chief facilities manager Nelson Cayabyab, and current Hawthorne principal Kathy Schaeffer confirmed that when the raw sewage was discovered under the school in November, the broken sewer pipe was capped that same month to stop the leakage. Since then, Schaeffer wrote in an email to Patch, “we have had no odors in the auditorium.” Cayabyab said that within a few days of identifying the problem, a neutralizing chemical was added to the affected soil to absorb the waste.  “The bottom line is that right now it’s neutralized, the existing soil there,” Cayabyab said. “There’s really no harm to the students or anybody at the site.”  Cayabyab also said that the school’s exhaust system has been fixed “to be able to evacuate a lot of the odors and smells that linger.” It is unknown at this point if the air was unsafe to breathe. School board President Brian Goldberg said he learned about the discovery of the human waste under Hawthorne “about two weeks ago.” When asked why he wasn’t notified of the problem earlier, he replied, “I don’t have an answer for that.” Cherniss said he had alerted Superintendent Gary Woods when the broken pipe was located. It is unclear when the leak began. Both Goldberg and Cherniss said it was possible the sewer line was damaged during renovations of the school’s auditorium in 2008, which were paid for with funds from 2002′s Measure K bond and carried out by Strategic Concepts, the consulting company started by former BHUSD facilities director Karen Christiansen. “We’re trying to clean up a lot of messes from previous projects,” Cherniss said. Christiansen was sentenced earlier this month to more than four years in prison after being found guilty in November of four felony conflict of interest charges for secretly negotiating to be an independent BHUSD contractor while performing her duties for the district. Christiansen was hired by the district in 2004 and reportedly received a total of $5.2 million from BHUSD between 2006 and 2009. Strategic Concepts’ records regarding repairs it made to Hawthorne and other city schools have not been made accessible to the district, Cherniss said.  Hawthorne was built in 1914. A survey conducted in August to ready the school for renovations under Measure E—passed by voters in 2008 to finance the modernization of Beverly Hills’ aging public schools—stated: “Several of the cast iron sewer laterals are severely corroded. Some appear to have holes or other significant defects.” The survey recommended that the pipes be replaced. Hawthorne is slated to undergo Measure E renovations in late summer 2013.  “We are going to test the soil and remove any soil that has been contaminated,” said Goldberg, who was elected to the board after Measure K renovations had been approved. “We’re doing everything we can to remediate the problem.” To view the agenda for Tuesday’s school board meeting, click here . Be sure to follow  Beverly Hills  Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . Go here to see the original: BHUSD Faces Clean-up of Raw Sewage Under Hawthorne School

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Scattered Showers in SoCal’s Forecast

January 20, 2012
Scattered Showers in SoCal’s Forecast

Showers will douse the Southland between tonight and Monday afternoon, after which bright sunshine and warmer temperatures will return to the region, National Weather Service forecasters said. Link: Scattered Showers in SoCal’s Forecast

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Jury Begins Deliberating Case Against Ex-BHUSD Superintendent

January 20, 2012

Jury deliberations began Thursday in the case against former Beverly Hills Unified School District Superintendent Jeffrey Hubbard , who is facing three felony misappropriation of public funds charges.  Hubbard, 54, allegedly approved $20,000 in stipends and a $500 car allowance raise for former BHUSD facilities director Karen Christiansen without school board consent. He is also charged with authorizing a pay increase to former district employee Nora Roque in May 2005 without the board’s approval.   “He was arrogant,” Deputy District Attorney Max Huntsman told the seven-man, five-woman jury during his closing arguments. “He felt that as superintendent he could do whatever he wanted and he didn’t care what the rules were.” Christiansen’s contract included a $150 monthly car allowance, and all changes to the contract were supposed to be made in writing, Huntsman said. Defense attorney Salvatore P. Ciulla countered during his closing arguments that although mistakes were made, Hubbard did not commit a crime. He also said Hubbard gave Roque a pay bump with the intent to put her on a salary schedule under which she would receive annual increases—something Hubbard said Roque was told would happen when she was hired. “He’s going to put his job on the line and possibly go to jail?” Ciulla asked. “It makes no sense.”  Hubbard has pleaded not guilty to all three charges. He served as BHUSD superintendent from 2004-6. In July 2006, he took over the superintendent position at the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. Huntsman also alleged that Hubbard and Christiansen had a “special relationship” because the two exchanged intimate emails with one another. “It was certainly not the average employer-employee relationship,” he said.  Christiansen, 53, was sentenced this month to four years and four months in prison. She was  found guilty  in November of four felony conflict of interest charges for secretly negotiating to be an independent BHUSD contractor while performing her duties for the district. Christiansen was hired by the district in 2004 and reportedly received a total of $5.2 million from BHUSD between 2006 and 2009.  Ciulla described the emails between Hubbard and Christiansen as “tongue-in-cheek inappropriate comments.” But he said the communications do not demonstrate a romantic relationship existed. This report was compiled with information from City News Service.    Be sure to follow  Beverly Hills  Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . More: Jury Begins Deliberating Case Against Ex-BHUSD Superintendent

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Pinkberry Co-Founder Arrested for Alleged Assault on Homeless Man

January 18, 2012

A founder of the Pinkberry frozen yogurt chain was arrested at Los Angeles International Airport Monday for allegedly attacking a homeless man along the Hollywood Freeway in June.  Young Lee, 47, was apprehended at about 2 p.m. Monday after arriving from Korea. He was arrested on a felony warrant for aggravated assault “related to an evening attack on a homeless beggar…on June 15, 2011,” according to the Los Angeles Police Department.  Lee and a companion got out of the car Lee was driving on Vermont Avenue near the Hollywood Freeway offramp to confront the homeless man because Lee thought the man had disrespected him by exposing a sexually explicit tattoo, according to the District Attorney’s Office.  Lee allegedly used a tire iron to beat the homeless man, who suffered a broken left forearm and several cuts to his head, according to the District Attorney’s Office.  Witnesses were able to describe the Range Rover the men were in and its license plate, which led to Lee, according to LAPD Lt. Paul Vernon. Police did not identify Lee’s alleged accomplice. “Witnesses picked out Lee from a photo display and a judge issued a warrant for his arrest,” Vernon said. “When federal databases alerted detectives that Lee was inbound on a flight from his native Korea on Jan. 16, detectives from [the LAPD’s fugitive] task force and the FBI met Lee at the airport and arrested him.”  Lee was released Tuesday on $60,000 bail and is scheduled to be arraigned Feb. 6 in Los Angeles Superior Court on one felony count of assault with a deadly weapon.  Convicted in 2001 for felony possession of a controlled substance and a misdemeanor for carrying a loaded firearm, Lee faces up to seven years in state prison if convicted on the aggravated assualt charge, according to the District Attorney’s Office.  A boxer-turned-architect, Lee co-founded Pinkberry with Shelly Hwang. Its first store opened in West Hollywood in 2005 and the low-calorie yogurt chain quickly grew. There are two locations in Beverly Hills: 9409 S. Santa Monica Blvd. and 240 S. Beverly Drive .    This article was compiled with information from City News Service. Be sure to follow  Beverly Hills  Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . Originally posted here: Pinkberry Co-Founder Arrested for Alleged Assault on Homeless Man

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BHUSD Moves Money to Measure E Fund and Basic Aid Reserve

January 17, 2012

The Board of Education voted unanimously last week to use settlement money to reimburse $2.5 million to the Measure E bond fund and add another $2.5 million to the district’s  basic aid reserve fund . Energy company Johnson Controls paid a total of $6.6 million to the Beverly Hills Unified School District’s general fund in November to settle claims regarding $7 million worth of goods and services the district purchased from the company at the recommendation of former facilities director Karen Christiansen. Johnson Controls had secretly hired Christiansen to be a consultant while she was working for the district.  Christiansen was found guilty in November of four felony conflict of interest counts and was  sentenced  this month to four years and four months in prison for infractions that occurred while she was a BHUSD employee. The district has spent  more than $2 million  in Measure E funds on legal fees related to the months-long Christiansen trial. The $334 million  Measure E bond  was passed by voters in 2008 to help renovate all five BHUSD schools. The basic aid reserve now holds $3.25 million, Assistant Superintendent of Business Services Alex Cherniss told the board. The fund is in place to support the district in case property taxes fluctuate and bring in less revenue than anticipated. Money in the basic aid reserve cannot be spent without approval from the board majority. The Johnson Controls settlement also includes a $1.6 million credit for goods and services from the company to be delivered at a later date. If the district doesn’t take advantage of the credit, it will receive $1 million in cash. “We will get approximately $1 million in additional funds in the next 10 months unless the board chooses to buy services [from Johnson Controls],” Cherniss said. “We will be coming back with a recommendation for another $1 million to appropriate.”  Cherniss did not indicate how the additional funds might be spent. Be sure to follow  Beverly Hills  Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . Read more: BHUSD Moves Money to Measure E Fund and Basic Aid Reserve

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Man Who Threw 7-Year-Old Son Off Boat Charged Today, Is Jail-Free

January 10, 2012
Man Who Threw 7-Year-Old Son Off Boat Charged Today, Is Jail-Free

The man we appropriately dubbed “Father of the Year” was convicted Monday for charges stemming from a troubling boating incident involving his 7-year-old son in August 2011. Sloan Steven Briles pleaded guilty to one felony count of child abuse and endangerment and one misdemeanor count of resisting an officer. more › View original post here: Man Who Threw 7-Year-Old Son Off Boat Charged Today, Is Jail-Free

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Pencil This In: Golden Globe Foreign Language Films, Dead Celeb Cookbook and Music for a School Night

January 10, 2012
Pencil This In: Golden Globe Foreign Language Films, Dead Celeb Cookbook and Music for a School Night

Awards season is ramping up and the Golden Globes prepare for Sunday’s ceremony by screening the nominated Foreign Language Films this week; It’s a School Night returns to Bardot; a Gary Oldman retrospective kicks off tonight; and a dead celeb cookbook event. Read on for all the details. more › Read the original here: Pencil This In: Golden Globe Foreign Language Films, Dead Celeb Cookbook and Music for a School Night

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New JPA Provides $9.7 Mil a Year for BHUSD

January 10, 2012

The Board of Education is expected Tuesday evening to approve a new four-year Joint Powers Agreement that provides $9.7 million annually in city support for district schools. The agreement is also scheduled to be discussed and voted upon during the regular City Council meeting that night.  The JPA is a four-year agreement in which the city pays the district for access to school facilities. The current JPA pays BHUSD $10.3 million a year and expires July 1, 2012. Council liaisons Mayor Barry Brucker, Vice Mayor Willie Brien, school board President Brian Goldberg and school board Vice President Jake Manaster spent the last six months negotiating the new agreement. In the final negotiations, Councilwoman Lili Bosse took Brucker’s place. City Treasurer Elliot Finkel had recommended cutting the next JPA to $9 million a year , so the $9.6 million figure is a relief for the school district. The JPA traditionally provides about 20 percent of the annual BHUSD budget. “I am very pleased with the negotiations and feel this new JPA is a real win for our community,” Goldberg told Patch. “I am hopeful that the full board and full council will agree and approve this newest JPA on Tuesday night.” Under the agreement, the district will get paid four times a year—Jan. 1, April 1, July 1 and Oct. 1. The new JPA agreement also provides a separate payment of $125,000 a year to pay for crossing guards at the four elementary schools. The 19-page agreement, which is posted on the board meeting agenda, provides for public access to school grounds facilities during specific times. For example, the agreement dictates that, “The District shall make available year-round on Saturdays and Sundays its outdoor athletic fields and play yards at the five school sites for use by the community… the District shall ensure that access to the outdoor facilities is provided between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.” The five school sites are El Rodeo School, Hawthorne School, Horace Mann School, Beverly Vista School and Beverly Hills High School. The district must also provide public access to school facilities on weekdays during summer, spring or winter recess from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., provided the city gives BHUSD at least 30 days notice. The five school libraries are to be made available to resident children for a minimum of three hours a week after the school day ends, according to the JPA. Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . Read more: New JPA Provides $9.7 Mil a Year for BHUSD

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Raw Police Video