Schools see slight increase in crime
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Deirdre Newman
NEWPORT-MESA -- The school district experienced a slight increase in
crime for the 2000-01 school year, according to a report released
Thursday by the California Department of Education.
The largest increase on Newport-Mesa Unified School District campuses
-- as in districts statewide -- was for battery. Newport-Mesa reported
3.19 incidents per 1,000 students, as compared with 1.54 incidents the
previous year.
The only decrease was in property crimes, which dropped from 4.26
incidents per 1,000 students to 2.95 incidents.
Supt. Rob Barbot said he was not dismayed by the increases, saying the
district has intensified its efforts to identify and report intimidating
and criminal behavior.
“When we put more assistant principals, more resource counselors and
trained our staff more intensively, we expected that we would identify
more [crimes],” Barbot said. “I’m surprised it wasn’t higher.”
Barbot said the district took painstaking efforts to fill in the gaps
in making schools safer after a student was choked at Corona del Mar High
School in May 2000.
The shortcomings, he explained, were attacked on many fronts: more
training of administrators, more counselors and assistant principals
brought in, school resource officers from the Newport Beach and Costa
Mesa police departments deployed on high school campuses, an
anti-bullying policy adopted last fall and character education
highlighted in the curriculum to emphasize positive behavior choices.
And the efforts are paying off, Barbot said
“The one thing that tells me that it’s working really well is we’ve
seen a drop in our property abuse and vandalism, so people know they’re
being watched,” he said.
District officials will now analyze the data -- looking beyond the
numbers to the specific crimes themselves and what schools they occurred
at. A gang task force composed of officials from both district cities
will also be examining the data.
Barbot said one of the major district safety goals is to increase
attention to students’ behavior and drug use and make sure they’re not
ignored.
“We want to make sure that no one is looking past an issue,” Barbot
said.
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