School district nets $8.23-million grant
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District was awarded an $8.23-million
federal grant to provide services for at-risk students, making it one
of 40 districts nationwide to receive the grant this year.
The Safe Schools and Healthy Students grant, which extends over
three years, provides funding for new programs and faculty members to
help students who are struggling emotionally or academically.
Newport-Mesa applied for the grant in April and plans to launch its
program in October.
“Our focus is on kids having difficulty in school who may not be
special education, may not be other things, but they’ll fall through
the cracks because there’s no one there to help them,” said Supt.
Robert Barbot.
Under the program, the district will organize a special team for
each of the district’s four zones that consists of nurses, school
resource officers, counselors and advocates for students, parents and
staff. Jane Garland, the district’s spokeswoman, will oversee the
program.
The goal of the Advocates Supporting Kids program, administrators
said, is to intervene with troubled students while their problems are
still manageable. The planned offerings include:
* Classroom discussions on emotional literacy and self-control,
held three to five times a week at elementary schools.
* Individual counseling for early adolescents about drug abuse,
attendance and other issues.
* Support groups for parents looking to improve family
communication.
* Early intervention programs for preschoolers and younger parents
to help prepare children for elementary school.
The money for the programs will come through the federal grant,
which will pay, in part, for additional faculty members. Newport-Mesa
has long offered counseling and mentoring services, but the grant
will allow for a number of faculty members to concentrate entirely on
at-risk students.
“We’ll keep everything we have, but what we have is limited
resources,” Garland said. “We have counselors, psychologists,
teachers who are passionate about this, but they all have another
job.”
Through the Advocates Supporting Kids program, parents, teachers
or other staff could recommend that students be examined for at-risk
behavior.
Garland said the district would begin in October by running data
searches on all students in the district to check for truancies,
suspensions or other signs of trouble.
Once a child has been identified as at-risk, the district may pair
him or her with a nurse or counselor or initiate contact with
parents.
For situations that administrators cannot handle themselves, the
grant also covers partnerships with the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
police departments, the county probation department and the Mental
Health Assn. of Orange County.
This year marks the first time Newport-Mesa has received a Safe
Schools and Healthy Students grant.
In 1999, the U.S. departments of education, justice, and health
and human services initiated the grants to prevent factors that lead
to youth violence, drug abuse and other problems.
In all, the government awarded $76 million to school districts and
other local educational agencies for this fall. Newport-Mesa’s yearly
allotment of $2.7 million was among the larger awards, although
slightly smaller than the annual $3 million that the district
requested.
“In tight budget times, we don’t have the funds, and that’s why
this was such a wonderful thing to receive,” Garland said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.