COMMUNITY COMMENTARY
Dana Black, Jim Ferryman and Martha Fluor
In June 1999, the Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board of
Education established a subcommittee composed of the three board members,
who currently have children in our schools, to review the 4210
(zero-tolerance policy) with district staff. This is not the first time
that the Board of Education has reviewed the policy. Over the course of
the last four years, this board has “tinkered” with the existing policy.
In 1996, as a result of lawsuits, the board of education defined the
terms “under the influence” and “school sponsored event.” In 1998, the
board amended the automatic transfer section of the policy to allow
elementary principals the leeway in dealing with kindergarten to
third-grade students caught with nail files (weapons) and aspirin
(drugs). Now, this subcommittee is looking at the automatic transfer
policy for all students.
Not one of us on this subcommittee is interested in “‘getting rid” of the
automatic transfer section. We all believe that an effective
zero-tolerance policy must have some significant consequences for those
students who violate the policy. We believe that they must be firm and
strictly enforced. We believe it should be applied uniformly to all
students.
We are interested in looking at what is in the best interest of the
student. We are interested in a policy that is consistent, fair and
uniformly applied to all students. We are interested in looking at
interventions that work, of providing a student and his or her parents
with options that assist the student and family in dealing with his or
her situation, of providing opportunities for growth in responsibility
and decision making. We are interested in a policy that provides staff
and families with options.
The staff of Newport-Mesa Unified School District will be making
recommendations to this subcommittee on constructive options to consider.
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board of Education will not make
this decision without a great deal of input from parents, students,
experts, legal counsel and interested community members. This is just the
beginning -- no decisions have been made.
* DANA BLACK, JIM FERRYMAN and MARTHA FLUOR are members of the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board of Education.
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