A federal executive department has found merit in an advocacy group’s civil rights claim against the school district.
A full parking lot signals the start of a new school year for the students and staff of South Philadelphia High School. With a new principal and measures to appreciate diversity in place, the institution is hoping to move beyond last year's drama
A sunlit sky greeted students Tuesday as they opened the 2010-11 school year. Those attending South Philadelphia High School, 2101 S. Broad St., are hoping to dispel the figurative clouds that darkened last year.
Their facility has instituted numerous changes, including the installation of a new principal. They likely have received their biggest assist, however, from the U.S. Department of Justice, which has found merit in a complaint against the School District of Philadelphia stemming from the December ’09 attacks at and around the school.
The DOJ has determined Aug. 27 that a January complaint from a national advocacy group possesses enough credibility to initiate discussions of further reform for the beleaguered school, according to published reports. The Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF) filed the complaint on behalf of Asian students who became victims of violence Dec. 2 and 3. The reports reveal the district receivied notice from the federal government to have the school devise means to staunch the race-related issues that have diminished the Asian students’ sense of safety.
The district and the DOJ remain in discussion on how to resolve matters, with Michael Davis, the former’s general counsel, stating in a release “the district will not comment further.” A district spokesman did not reply to an e-mail by press time.
In light of the announcement and the beginning of the school year, a press conference united the South Philadelphia High School Asian Student Advocates Association (SASA), as well as students and families from the school, Sept. 1.
“We met mainly to discuss reactions to the [DOJ] announcement and remaining concerns,” Helen Gym, a volunteer with Asian Americans United (AAU), a 25-year-old organization seeking to encourage those of Asian ancestry to build their communities and unite to challenge oppression, said.
At the conference, Bach Tong, 16, who spent two years at the school before transferring this summer, discussed the unease he and others of Asian descent regularly felt.
“Racial slurs, food being thrown at us, cursing, all of that made us feel as if we were targets because of our race and immigrant statuses,” Tong, a Vietnam native who has lived in America since April ’08, said. “I hope I will be the last student to experience and suffer this type of violent school.”
Cecilia Chen hopes for the same. Chen, an AALDEF lawyer, filed an 11-page complaint Jan. 19, citing a violation of the students’ constitutional civil rights and the Equal Educational Opportunities Act of 1974, whose six elements forbid all forms of discrimination.
“AALDEF, along with community groups, has cooperated with the DOJ during the course of its investigation,” Chen said of the time between the January filing and the August disclosure, although she could not say if the DOJ has found merit with the complaint as a whole or if it had touched only on certain aspects. “The DOJ interviewed around 20 Chinese and Vietnamese SPHS students and community advocates as part of our efforts to assist with the investigation.”
The investigation became necessary following the December incidents that required 13 Asian students to seek medical assistance for their injuries. The complaint contends groups of mostly African-American students perpetrated daylong rounds of attacks against 30 Asian students.
The resulting sense of insecurity prompted many Asian students to stage an eight-day boycott and led to the filing of the complaint, which alleges “deliberate and discriminatory indifference” against Asian students. It also highlighted more than two dozen assaults from the 2008-09 school year to urge investigation into the affairs at the school that the Pennsylvania Department of Education has consistently labeled “persistently dangerous.” It earned the distinction because its yearly number of dangerous incidents, such as robbery, rape, aggravated assault, possession of a weapon, has exceeded 2 percent of its enrollment.
Anticipating the complaint’s filing, the district took measures to improve the school’s safety. Its most eyecatching initiative involved installing 126 security cameras in addition to the 23 it had already been using. Former Principal LaGreta Brown resigned last May following critiques of her handling of the students’ complaints and the revelation she lacked proper certification.
According to Chen, AALDEF, one of six groups to support the students, filed its administrative complaint with the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division.
“Our goal in filing was to bring about much needed changes to SPHS after school officials failed to respond adequately to the harassment for years,” Chen said of the school, which in the ’09-10 school year had Asians comprise slightly more than 19 percent of its nearly 1,000-strong enrollment.
Earlier this year, the district agreed to use Student Problem Identification and Resolution of Issues Together (SPIRIT), a DOJ-sponsored conflict resolution program. As of March, Chen had no knowledge of whether the school implemented any of the student recommendations.
The school has, however, made modifications. Otis D. Hackney III became the fifth principal in six years July 1, bringing a no-nonsense approach to acceptance of diversity.
The Asian Arts Initiative, created in 1993 in response to community concerns about racial tension, will run new after-school arts programs. Kimlime Chek-Taylor joined the staff Sept. 3 as assistant principal. The Cambodian-born Chek-Taylor comes to the secondary institution having served as the dean of students at John H. Taggart School, 400 W. Porter St.
“We have a need for thoughtful and serious approaches to issues. We don’t want to be pandered to,” Gym said, citing a wait-and-see attitude on what she sees as “reactionary moves.”
A new year cannot always cloak old problems. Five troubled area schools learned that Jan. 25, as the School District of Philadelphia included them among 18 facilities in Year II of the Renaissance Schools Initiative. Three comprehensive models will attempt to diminish the numerous woes that the quintet faces.
The security and police presence increased, even as Principal Lagreta Brown kept a watchful eye outside South Philadelphia High School as the students filed out Monday. Since Friday, closed-door mee...
Asian students attacked over the course of two days at South Philadelphia High School blamed what had happened on a lack of action by the administration, according to previous testimonies by the students and community leaders.
On any given day, there is bound to be a fight in the lunchroom at South Philadelphia High School, two 11th-graders who declined to give their names said last week as they left the building at 2101 S...
Fate provided South Philadelphia High School, 2101 S. Broad St., two chances last week to prove that it has busied itself with finding means of enhancing student achievement and parental involvement while also decreasing safety concerns. Three days apart, the opportunities revealed that the school’s community covets placing considerable distance between its spotted past and envisioned future.
Exactly one year after Asian students ended an eight-day, violence-induced boycott of South Philadelphia High School, 2101 S. Broad St., the School District of Philadelphia vowed to keep them and their educational brethren free from harassment, agreeing to guidelines from two probes into its safety procedures.
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1. Mary Ann Cusato Vita said... on Sep 9, 2010 at 12:54PM
“I graduated this school in 1960 and we had the same problems, not as bad as now,but we had them. Love my South Philadelphia High School.”
2. Janice said... on Sep 10, 2010 at 03:29AM
“Maybe the DOJ can follow through and perform their duty with this case unlike the Black Panther case. Highly doubtful.”
3. critter said... on Sep 13, 2010 at 07:03PM
“Same here. I went to Sothern and sure we had problems, but not to the extent of allowing roaming mad lunitics beating just the asian kids up, then moving on to the next room and then trying to sweep that under the rug makes me sick. Also the principal and the head of the school district after the unsucessfully tried to pair it off as kids will be animals didn;t work, they then tried to pass it off as gang related. If this were gang related the kids that went room to room would be in intensive care at the AMethodist. The principal and the head of the school district need to find another school to screw up at.”
4. TJD said... on Oct 5, 2010 at 11:43PM
“Critter....I agree with ALL of your thoughts (but don't tell anyone anymore where you went to school).
”