Issue 5: Feb. 7, 2022

Page 1

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SPOTLIGHT

LIFESTYLE

SPORTS

Counterculture’s musical roots in Palo Alto. B6

Paly’s dirt biking community. B7

A changing campus: Paly over the years. B1

Digital footprint: how your online presence follows you throughout life, what happens to your online data. B4-5

NATALIE DOCKTOR/USED WITH PERMISSION

Monday, Feb. 7, 2022

The Campanile

Vol. CIV, No. 5

Palo Alto High School, 50 Embarcadero Road, Palo Alto, CA 94301

1

PALO ALTO

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I

n an effort to keep schools open amid growing concern over the surge in the Omicron COVID-19 variant, Superintendent Don Austin has introduced the district’s new, 1 Palo Alto Program. This program calls for parent volunteers to help fill worsening staffing shortages on the district’s campuses. Austin sent a video announcement to the community and PAUSD employees in early January, introducing the program and urging parents to support the district by helping substitute teachers, sanitizing classrooms and bathrooms, preparing food and assisting at COVID-19 testing clinics. “The jobs won’t be glamorous — many of the essential jobs we perform every day for your kids aren’t glamorous,” Austin said. “(But) if you’re able, please answer that call; we have opportunities for everyone.” Austin said substitute teacher shortages in the district continue to increase with some days seeing more than 70 teachers absent. “We have raised the rate for teachers cover-

ing classes on their prep periods from $60 to $150, and teachers are responding,” Austin said. “We also understand teachers are going to get tired, so it is not a long term solution, but in the short term it is working.” Austin said more than 460 parents signed up to help with the 1 Palo Alto program initially within one day of his announcement. “I’m really excited that so many parents value our school district enough to come forward this quickly. It’s a pretty powerful message for the school district,” Austin said. “The number really makes you sit back and just think about how lucky we all are to be here.” AP Research teacher Adam Yonkers said he supports the program. 1 Palo Alto continues on A5

Margot Blanco, Maya Singer

Staff Writer, News & Opinion Editor

BRADEN LEUNG/THE CAMPANILE

Parent volunteer Joanie Haney, one of almost 500 parents who signed up to help on district campuses as a part of its 1 Palo Alto Program, assists in the weekly COVID-19 testing clinic in the Peery Center. Parents like Haney are filling staffing shortages across campus, including monitoring the Embarcadero crosswalk and Student Center during lunch.

Exploring different forms, mediums of dance. B8

PALO ALTO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT PALO ALTO HIGH SCHOOL 50 EMBARCADERO RD. PALO ALTO, CA 94301 NON-PROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE

PAI D PALO ALTO PERMIT #44

Affordable teacher housing plan to move forward Maya Singer

News & Opinion Editor After three years of planning, Palo Alto’s first affordable housing project for teachers received a final approval by the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors at its Jan. 11 meeting. The 110-unit housing project will provide affordable housing to teachers and school faculty in public districts in both Santa Clara County and San Mateo County. The project will be developed by Abode Communities and Mercy Housing, in conjunction with Meta — formerly known as Facebook — and the City of Palo Alto, according to a statement released by Santa Clara District 5 Supervisor Joe Simitian. The project will be built at 231 Grant Ave., on county land, and has already secured $3 million from the City of Palo Alto, along with $25 million from Meta. “I’m pleased that the project is moving forward with the help of so many local partners,” Simitian said. “These new advancements, even while the county tackles our current public health crisis, show how needed new housing is. Especially for our teachers and school support staff.” Simitian, the son of two public school teachers and a former school board member, first proposed teacher housing at the 231 Grant site to the Board of Supervisors in 2018. By the end of 2021, the design planning, zoning and entitlement process was complete. Construction is anticipated to begin in fall 2022. “The property offers an exciting opportunity to create new, high-quality and much-needed rental housing, affordable for teachers, school employees and their families,” a statement from the 231 Grant project said. “This new community will include studio, one- and two-bedroom apartments, amenity spaces and landscaped gardens.” The project will be built in Palo Alto near California Avenue and the Caltrain station. Palo Alto City Council Member Greg Tanaka said he has concerns about commuting for Santa Clara County teachers not located in the Palo Alto Unified School District. “Palo Alto is on the north end of the county,” Tanaka said. “So it’s a weird place to put housing for all teachers in Santa Clara County, especially for teachers in Gilroy and Morgan Hill. It would have made more sense if it was in Santa Clara, or somewhere more central.” Tanaka said the City of Palo Alto has no authority over the construction of the housing project or the planning. The project as currently planned will Housing continues on A5

Teacher, substitute shortages worsen as Omicron cases surge Anaya Bhatt

Lifestyle Editor It’s been just a month into the second semester of school and PAUSD has already reported recordhigh numbers of positive COVID-19 cases. In the past two weeks, the district has reported 364 student

cases and 61 faculty cases — positivity rates so high PAUSD abandoned the close-contact notifications it sent out throughout the first semester. In an email sent to district families, Superintendent Don Austin said families should assume their children are exposed every day at school and urged them to test regularly to help limit the spread of the variant.

English teacher and Palo Alto Educators’ Association negotiation team member Mimi Park said given how the district has handled the Omicron surge, there is an overwhelming feeling of confusion and uncertainty from most of the staff and students. “I’ve never seen teacher morale this low.” Park said. “The biggest

complaint I heard in recent weeks is that why didn’t we shut down for two weeks after we got back from the holidays. The number of absences that we have is absolutely insane –– student absences are one thing, but staffing shortages are another.” Director of Human Resources Lisa Hickey said the high teacher and faculty positivity rates have

worsened the already significant staffing shortages, greatly increasing the demand for the district’s limited supply of substitute teachers. “We’re hovering at about 80 absences, and we have about close to 800 staff members, so we are missing a little bit more than 10% on average,” Hickey said. Omicron continues on A2

Journalism pathway will open up to more freshmen starting next school year Colleen Wang

Senior Staff Writer In an effort to open Paly’s journalism programs up to more freshmen, the journalism advisers are encouraging rising 9th graders to sign up for a semester of Photojournalism and a semester of Introduction to Broadcast. This combination of classes will serve as the prerequisite to allow next year’s freshmen to join a publication in their sophomore year. Students will be able to join the Broadcast Journalism and Radio Broadcasting publications (InFocus and KPLY) after taking the Introduction to Broadcast course, according to journalism adviser Paul Kandell. Kandell said students who take Photojournalism will also be able to join publications as photographers starting in sophomore year. This change in Paly’s journalism path-

ways is also partially due to the increased awareness of the lack of diversity of grade levels in current publications, Kandell said. “We’ll be able to provide this opportunity to a larger set of students who might not have thought about journalism before,” Kandell said. “In a push from the staff, the whole faculty has been engaged in work to think about our programs in terms of inclusion and access.” Kandell said the changes should help InFocus in particular, which traditionally has a smaller class than the other publications. “We are expecting and hoping that this will provide a shot in the arm for InFocus, which has had some enrollment challenges,” Kandell said. “This will be a great way to allow (InFocus adviser) Mr. Satterthwaite to teach the younger group without interruption and stabilize that enrollment.”

Kandell said he anticipates Photojournalism becoming a dedicated platform to focus on the visual arts of journalism, and journalism adviser Brian Wilson agrees. “Not everyone who joins a publication necessarily joined it because they want to be a print reporter, so this provides them with another opportunity to be part of the program and not necessarily have it be specifically through the Beginning Journalism program,” Wilson said. Wilson said this new plan also takes into account balanced enrollment in journalism. “We always want to make sure that we have a healthy flow of journalists into the publications, which is a little tricky because the program is so big, and we have a whole bunch of publications to feed,” Wilson said. Kandell said this new pathway is a compromise between making Beginning Journalism continues on A2

KEN OGATA/THE CAMPANILE

Senior Jerry Fang and juniors Gopala Varadarajan and Jonas Pao work on the latest issue of Verde magazine in the Media Arts Center. A new initiative will open up the journalism program to more freshman starting next school year. “We’ll be able to provide this opportunity to a larger set of students who might not have thought about journalism before,” Verde adviser Paul Kandell said.


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