Miramonte School's Decision to Replace All Staff Announced In Parents-Only
Meeting
Originally posted: 02/ 7/2012 4:05 pm
Edited by I,Praetorian
In an effort to take his message directly to the families of
Miramonte Elementary, LA schools superintendent John Deasy shared the news of
the entire faculty's replacement in a parents-only, press-barred meeting on
Monday evening.
Officially scheduled for 6 p.m. in the auditorium of South
Region High School, families started showing up to the venue hours early. 1,200
people quickly packed the standing-room only auditorium and dozens of families
were left stranded outside the meeting, along with journalists who were not
allowed inside.
Before the meeting was over, Deasy's staffers ushered
reporters into a smaller room, ostensibly to prepare for a press conference.
But the move also had the effect of secluding journalists in a more isolated
location when the meeting let out, making it that much harder to gauge parental
reactions.
When Deasy finally arrived for the press conference, he was
faced with about a dozen irritated journalists who peppered him with challenges
to his decision to bar media from the big event.
For instance, Deasy described the parents' reaction to the
staff replacement as "relief" communicated by frequent applause. But
that only fueled the fire for the reporters challenging him.
KTLA's David Begnaud asked, "Why did you decide to keep
media out of the meeting with the parents so we are hearing secondhand on how
they reacted from you?" Begnaud continued, "On what legal grounds do
you bar someone with no recording equipment from coming into the
meetings?"
KCAL9's Suraya Fadel also challenged Deasy. "You can
tell us they applauded and all that. How do we know?"
Throughout, Deasy stood firm on his decision to keep press
out of the meeting. Recalling the media's announcement of teacher Mark Berndt's
arrest last week, he explained, "Parents were so angry and so disrespected
that they learned the information first through the media and not through the
district ... And I wasn't going to disrespect them a second time."
His decision to bar journalists didn't stop KNX's Claudia
Peschiutta, who was able to make her way into the auditorium. In a video report
for CBS2/KCAL9, Peschiutta confirmed Deasy's report that parents communicated
their approval of the staff replacement through applause, but she also noted
that some parents were asking that the press be allowed inside to make sure
that the meeting was "as open and transparent as possible."
WATCH:click here
The Associated Press' video report also notes that many
parents were glad to hear the news about the staff's replacement from the
district first -- although perhaps not at the expense of freedom of the press.
Miramonte mother Nancy Linares told the AP, "I want everyone to know
they're covering up something, that's why they don't want the media in there."
For parents who could not get inside, the parking lot was a
dark and tense place to wait for a secondhand announcement. Families huddled
with friends and there was tension between those who decided to speak out about
the abuse on television and those who decided to keep quiet. Among the crowd,
parental activists were passing out petitions to transfer their children away
from Miramonte Elementary School. Near the entrance of the auditorium, a small
group of parents protested the closed doors with chants and by banging on the
gate.
Unaware that the announcement inside was making her worries
moot, Miramonte parent Elizabeth Varela told The Huffington Post that she and
her husband were struggling over the decision to transfer their 5-year-old son
in the middle of the academic year. "I've never thought of Miramonte as a
bad school," Varela explained, but "now we're hoping he's accepted
[somewhere else]."
Karla Rivas, a 20-year-old college student, waited outside
the parents-only meeting because her little brother was in 8th grade at the
school. Both she and her brother were former students of Bernard Springer, a
teacher who was arrested on suspicion of fondling two girls. She expressed
dismay at parents who were shouting and chanting with protest signs when they
were stranded outside. "They're screaming that they want justice,"
she said. "What else do they want? [Berndt and Springer] are in jail
already."
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