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Palo Alto Unified School District Henry M. Gunn High School 780 Arastradero Rd Palo Alto, CA 94306
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THEORACLE
PG. 13 FEATURES
Henry M. Gunn High School
http://gunnoracle.com/
Thursday, November 9, 2017 Volume 55, Issue 3
780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306
Athletics department, administration respond to complaints about girls’ locker room closure Joy Huang
Centerfold Editor
On Aug. 25, female athletes found signs outside of their locker room that read: “Girls’ locker room closed at 5:15 p.m. today for varsity football game.” The Lynbrook football team would be occupying the girls’ locker room, and the female athletes had to take their belongings from their lockers before the room closed. This trend continued for the Sept. 8 game. After seeing the visiting football players fill up the girls’ locker room aisles before 5:15 p.m. and overhearing one football player scream an expletive at a freshman girl on Sept. 8, cross country athlete senior Tjasa Kmetec informed the administration on Sept. 11 how the female athletes were affected by the boys’ usage of the locker rooms. Assistant Principal Pier Angeli La Place promptly responded by contacting Athletic Director Curtis Johansen to implement a different plan. “This an equity issue,” La Place said. “I do not believe that a male sport should supercede or [be] given more value or importance than girls’ sports. Which is what I told [Kmetec].” The administration took immediate action, and the visiting football teams were directed to use the Titan Gym boys’ locker room instead of the Bow Gym girls’ locker room for the next home game on Oct. 13 (a game later cancelled) and every subsequent game. On Oct. 20, a Schoology message informed the student body that the girls’ locker room would be closed for the Homecoming football game, but according to Johansen, the message was incorrect and the locker rooms were not closed that day. Johansen says the visiting team used the girls’ locker room in the beginning of the season because Titan Gym locker rooms only have one bathroom and are too small for the visiting teams, which usually consist of 30 to 40 players.“The idea initially is that we have a bigger space for a lot of people coming in, and that would be the case of any team, male or female,” he said. Another reason to separate the two football teams is to prevent any complications that could happen. “Sometimes visiting teams are well-behaved people, but sometimes you can have a few bad apples,” Johansen said.
La Place said that the reason is understandable because placing the home and visiting team in the same space may cause supervision issues, so she and Johansen discussed creating a plan that would give the two football teams separate spaces while not affecting female athletes. Johansen said that his intention was to be a good host for the visiting teams. “We’re never trying to make it so that one group is being prioritized over another; it’s not what we stand for,” he said. “We stand for trying to make sure everybody had what they need to have.” La Place believes that this issue was caused by the lack of awareness. “I want to say that I think it was with the best of intentions; I don’t think that our Athletic Director or anyone else [was] intending for this to be an unfair situation,” she said. “Almost always, institutionalized inequalities are done without awareness of the potential impact.” Johansen and La Place plan to continue communicating with coaches to make sure that the visiting teams will use the Titan Gym locker rooms. According to La Place, who is in charge of athletics and equity, the original plan had the potential to violate Title IX. “Whether it violates the law of Title IX or not, I definitely think of it as an equity issue that has to be addressed,” she said. “It’s something that we have to be aware of and change.” The NCAA’s website states: “Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972 is a federal law that states ‘No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.’” The website also states that when Title IX is applied, “[it] requires the equal treatment of female and male student-athletes in the provisions of...locker rooms, practice and competitive facilities…” On the days when the girls’ locker room closed early, some female athletes’ performances were affected, as they could not access their lockers and changing space after practice. For Rufer, the early closure meant she had to cut her workouts short. “When the locker rooms closed early, I had to run a shorter distance so I would get back before they closed,” she said.
LOCKER ROOM—p.3 Sofia Sierra-Garcia
Removal of clerical positions to affect teachers, students Stephy Jackson
Centerfold Editor
At the end of the 2016-2017 school year, the Palo Alto Unified School District announced that certain support staff positions would be eliminated due to a shortfall in the district budget, and a reallocation of funding from Partners in Education (PiE). According to Principal Kathleen Laurence, at the end of the 2016-17 school year the district had Gunn and Paly cut one full-time equivalent (FTE) position from the classified staff (uncertified and non-teaching staff such as department secretaries and tech support). In addition to that one position, 2.25 other FTE classified positions would be eliminated due to PiE’s decision to shift funding to three areas: Wellness and Support, Visual and Performing Arts and science, technology, engineering and math. Laurence
was able to request a one-year grace period that postpones the 2.25 classified staff position cuts until sometime this spring. Principal’s Secretary Martha Elderon believes that classified staff help promote the wellbeing of teachers and students. “We want to support the teachers—that’s what the classified workers do, which is not just for our benefit but really for the benefit of the students because it helps lighten the teachers’ workloads,” she said. Elderon explained that most of the work done by clerical staff is logistical and organizational planning, and she feels that there would be consequences if classified staff positions were eliminated. “If we aren’t there to support the teachers, then they get stressed and as a result, students don’t get as much teaching time from them,” she said. According to Elderon, staff cuts only exacerbate the workload of individual departments. “The result of last
year’s cut was that we lost our science and social studies secretary and the remaining secretaries need to fill in, so it is detrimental to the departments,” Elderon said. The remaining position cuts were postponed when enough funding was found to pay the salaries of classified staff positions until spring 2018. Science department Instructional Supervisor Laurie Pennington has been directly affected by the loss of the science and social studies secretary. According to Pennington, the district cut a full-time clerical position from both high schools. “There were other positions that had been funded by money from PiE funds that were no longer going to be funded,” she wrote in an email. “Because of that, a number of secretaries had received notices of layoff; however, when the district decided to let [the school] STAFF CUTS—p.4