Why we fight pomona




















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Please enter Valid details Ok got it! Enter Email ID Submit. Edit Email Id Contact Us. Create New Save OR. Select From Existing Playlist. The pressure from activists that led the board to eliminate funding for police and reimagine school safety in June gave way to new pressures from those who believe that the Pomona Police Department plays a crucial role in keeping schools safe.

Richard Martinez said during an Oct. The Board of Education approved a plan that cuts a third of the officers with the Los Angeles School Police Department, bans the use of pepper spray on students and diverts funds from the department to improve the education of Black students. The Pomona school board is not alone in its angst over school safety policies and policing that emerged after nationwide protests over the killing of Black people by police officers and evidence that police disproportionately target Black and Latino students.

The Fremont Unified School District last November voted to discontinue its school resource officer program, only to restore the program by May. Last month, two L. The move was rejected by a board majority that has firmly sided with activists who say a police presence on campus traumatizes students — especially Black students — and results in them being treated like suspects.

The Pomona decision comes as school administrators and teachers throughout California and the nation are expressing concerns about tensions , fights and bad behavior among some students, possibly linked to the rigors of in-person school schedules after months of isolation and mounting mental health problems.

Pomona school district defunds police, reimagines school safety. Pomona Unified will not renew its contract with the city police department following demands from student activists. But he also said the decision to not re-enter into contracts with local law enforcement was based in part on the fact that students were not on campus because of the pandemic. The earlier decision to rely on proctors was made during the Delta surge of the pandemic — and only shortly after vaccines became available to people 12 and older — when administrators did not yet know how many students would be returning to campus, Unaka said.

Martinez did not cite the Delta variant or school closures when discussing the reasons behind the original defunding decision in an interview with The Times over the summer. At the time, he described the decision as a result of community concerns and calls to move toward a restorative justice approach to school safety.

Several students outside Pomona High School on Wednesday morning spoke in favor of more security. Eliminate school police, L. In one, a Lancaster High School student alleged that she was slammed to the ground by a deputy at school after refusing to give him her phone. The other case involved the fatal shooting of year-old Mona Rodriguez by a Long Beach school safety officer in September. The officer, Eddie F. Gonzalez, fired at a moving car in which Rodriguez was a passenger, striking her in the head.

He is now facing murder charges. Mejia, the police department spokeswoman, said all Pomona police officers recently completed a two-day use of force de-escalation class and will attend implicit bias training.

The school resource officers will receive additional training — including implicit bias, restorative justice practices, procedural justice, trauma-informed practices, diversity and de-escalation. Board member Adrienne Konigar-Macklin said during the Oct. She also advocated strongly for school resource officers to be trained in crisis intervention and management, and said the board could consider having the officers in different uniforms so they are not viewed as a police presence.

Some in the community were not appeased by those steps. Hayley Smith covers trending and breaking news for the Los Angeles Times. Newsom returns to public eye after sudden absence sparked social media speculation. The L.



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