Mascot tug-o-war reaches board
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Mary A. Castillo
Twelve high school students were joined by Laguna Beach High
School alumni and parents at the board meeting to protest a surprise
second vote on the name change at the high school.
Students were given a ballot and a Scantron Tuesday morning. They
were allowed to select Breakers, Artists or to abstain.
Breakers won with 442 votes, Artists received 334, 78 students
abstained or were absent.
“We were in second period and our counselor came in and didn’t
give us an explanation why we were taken out of class,” said Katelyn
Massey, 16. “We truly believed we were being drug tested.”
In a statement she delivered before the packed audience and the
school board, Katelyn expressed her concern that the election was an
attempt to quickly resolve the name change issue. But she charged
that the election itself defied student rights to be advised and
given a chance to debate the issue before it went to ballot.
Her voice trembled when she told of the jeering and taunting she
and other students were subjected to when they spoke up about the
election. She asked the school board to intervene based on the
Associated Student Body Constitution Article II, section 8 that gives
the school administration power to veto any decision made by the ASB.
“So any decision by students that stands has approval and
agreement of the school administration, which answers to the
superintendent and the school board,” she said. “So the buck really
stops here with this board.”
She sat down to a round of applause.
“When was the last time adults were confronted with a surprise
election in a captive environment,” asked Walker Reed, former
president of the alumni association.
He claimed that the election process was flawed because it had not
allowed for students to fully explore the issues.
“I would’ve voted for Artists if someone actually gave me a
ballot,” said Lincoln Burger, a senior athlete who pointed out the
flaws of the second vote.
Members of the board listened intently and praised the students
for coming forward with their concerns about the process. But they
stressed that they could not take action on the issue.
“I would like a copy of the constitution and bylaws,” School Board
Member Robert Whalen said. “Obviously people are very concerned about
the process.”
However, he responded to thinly veiled accusations that the
Student Council operated in collusion with school administrators to
force an underhanded election on students.
“I don’t attribute those motives to [Nancy Blade],” he said. “The
process may have been imperfect but it was not from ill motive.”
David Bean, student representative to the school board took his
turn to speak on behalf of the Associated Student Body.
“We haven’t been forcing decisions on students,” he said. “We’re
not a small group that makes decisions without consulting students.
We haven’t made a decision if we favor the Breakers or the Artists.”
Natalie Hills, 15, asked him if the Student Council had considered
a compromise she submitted to the council, Supt. Theresa Daem and
Principal Blade. She proposed that the sports teams be allowed to
call themselves Breakers and that the entire student body be known as
the Artists.
“ASB is swamped with things like homecoming,” he said.
He revealed that ASB had plans in the works to establish a way for
alumni and members of the community to weigh in with their opinions
and suggestions on general school events.
After the public comment session of the meeting ended, the
majority of the audience left the board room to talk outside.
“Right now I’m not proud to be part of this,” Katelyn said. “But
I’m going to run for ASB as a way to make a difference in this
school.”
* MARY A. CASTILLO is a news assistant for the Coastline Pilot.
She covers education, public safety and City Hall.
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