Shalimar on track to reopen
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Shalimar Learning Center is on track to reopen after
dozens of community members expressed their support for the after-school
tutoring program at a meeting Monday evening.
Children held up signs in support of the center and Shalimar’s teen
leaders also asked for a reopening, saying they think of the center as a
second home where they can get advice, information and supplies often
unobtainable at their real homes.
“We have listened very carefully tonight and it is very clear that
there is not one person in this room who wants the center to be closed,”
said Rev. Bill Flanagan of St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church in Newport
Beach, speaking for the center’s sponsors. “We’re going to work very hard
with you to open the center again.”
Cheers and applause greeted the announcement.
Randy Barth, volunteer chairman of Think Together, the organization
that oversees Shalimar and five similar learning centers, said staff
members will meet later this week to begin the process of reopening.
The 6-year-old center shut its doors this month after children and
parents protested the Sept. 12 firing of Maria Alvarez, a longtime staff
member.
Barth said the decision to close the center was made because staff
members felt threatened by the angry protests of the community.
Alvarez was let go because she failed to follow a new schedule for the
tutoring program, Barth said.
The learning center rents three apartments for its program, which
serves about 300 children. Because of space limits, the program
established “teams” of students who were scheduled to come to the center
at different times.
Alvarez has said that she didn’t agree with the scheduling, but did
not refuse to follow it.
Many people at the meeting spoke in support of Alvarez, who did not
attend.
“Many of us, the parents, ran to Maria when we had a problem or got
papers we didn’t understand,” said area resident Marisol Canas. “Children
turned to Maria for help because no one helped them like she did. She
talked to them and always asked them if they needed anything. We want
Maria back because the children want Maria back.”
No decision concerning Alvarez was made at the meeting, but Barth
asked for forgiveness and apologized for “any remarks I might have made
that are hurtful to the community or to Maria.”
All who spoke at the meeting said the main concern was the center --
and its students.
“Education is the most important thing we can provide to our
children,” said Karen Robinson, a Costa Mesa City Council candidate. “The
closing of the [center] has been devastating to this community. While
there is always two sides to a story, it is very important to remember
who is suffering each day the center is closed -- these children right
here.”
Another major theme was reconciliation between the community, staff
members and volunteers.
“We are not perfect people,” Flanagan said. “We come together
representing different cultures, two languages and often two different
ways of looking at the world. Because of that, we often have not
understood each other. We need to work harder, to learn to listen before
we talk, think before we act and pray before we lose our tempers.”
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