Octagon 2018-19 Issue 1

Page 1

THE

OCTAGON

Non-Profit Organization U.S. POSTAGE PAID Sacramento, CA Permit No. 1668

@scdsoctagon

VOL.42 NO.1 • Sacramento Country Day School • 2636 Latham Drive, Sacramento • September 18, 2018

Safety procedures in works after recent campus security audit BY MEHDI LACOMBE

W

NOT SMOKE AND MIRRORS Learning specialist Kelley Brown defends herself against a dummy during the faculty’s campus safety training with Knowledge Saves Lives. PHOTO USED BY PERMISSION OF EMILY ALLSHOUSE

ith the implementation of teacher safety training, more frequent lockdown drills and a campus safety evaluation, it’s clear that school safety is becoming a bigger concern at Country Day. In the wake of recent school shootings, other schools in the Sacramento area have also been amping up security, instituting new policies where all campus and classroom doors remain locked at all times. “Keeping classroom doors locked is a procedure that I learned about from Homeland Security, FBI and regional law enforcement,” Gerry Lane, director of campus safety at Jesuit High School, said. “The other subtle changes and suggestions we’ve instituted are actions that have been recommended to us by school safety professionals for mitigating potential on-campus assailant incidents.” Past on-campus shooting incidents around the country have been the main cause for these new features, according to Lane. “The lessons learned from Columbine, Sandy Hook, Parkland and others have been very difficult,” Lane said. “But they have also shown us what we need to be aware of for our students, staff and administrators safety across the country.” With this added security also comes a need for more secrecy on school security matters, according to Lane. “I would not want safety proce-

dures to be shared in public, as one of the lessons of Parkland is that assailants have begun to use school safety measures to exploit their reprehensible agenda,” Lane said. The Parkland shooter was an expelled student, meaning he would’ve had access to any of the school’s previous public security policy, according to a CNN article on the event. “Knowing how a school will respond to incidents allows assailants to plan how to defeat these measures and subsequently cause more damage or injury,” Lane said. And Lane wasn’t the only one to share this concern. St. Francis High School, which also started locking all campus and classroom doors at all times, refused to comment when asked about its security. “We do not openly discuss security information outside of our school community,” Cynthia Cost, dean of students at St. Francis, said. The email, though it contained no security information, was even followed by a confidentiality notice. However, Roya Pahlavan, a former Country Day student and current senior at St. Francis, was willing to share some reactions about the new policy. “During the first day of school, our teachers told us about the policy,” Pahlavan said. Aside from that announcement, Pahlavan said the students weren’t told anything else other than a few joking complaints from teachers.

SAFETY page 3 >>

Oregon Shakespeare Festival sees $2 million go up in flames BY CHARDONNAY NEEDLER

“unhealthy for sensitive groups” while AQI readings above 150 are The Carr fires in Redding, Cali- “unhealthy for everyone” - especialfornia, scorched over 220,000 acres, ly athletes and students in P.E. Myers said that the athletic deaccording to Vox.com. The Ferguson partment subscribes to an email fires ravaged almost 100,000 acres near Yosemite National Park, shut- containing the hourly air-quality ting down the park for almost two report from Sacramento Metropolweeks in late July and early August, itan Air Quality; she also said she forwards that email to other deaccording to the Incident Inforpartment members to ensure mation System (IIS). they receive it. Most of these “suIn addition, laminated per fires” - the sheets reminiscent of stop new term some lights - with color-coded meteorologists indices (green for “good” are using to AQIs below 50, yellow describe such for “moderate” AQIs large and clibelow 100, orange for mate-altering “unhealthy for senfires - have been sitive groups” AQIs contained since below 150, red for mid- to early “unhealthy” AQIs August, accordbelow 200 and ing to IIS. crimson for But the dam“hazardous” age and inconvenience didn’t HOLY SMOKES! Breathing the AQIs above 200) stop with the worst air quality in Ashalnd - contain direcactive flames. during Nicole Wolkov’s, ’17, visit tions for what Data from was as bad as smoking 10 cig- to do with chilIIS show that arettes, according to Berkeley dren and how smoke from Earth. GRAPHIC BY LARKIN BAR- activities must be changed at those fires blan- NARD-BAHN the various AQI keted the entire West Coast, causing air quality indi- readings. For example, at an AQI of ces (AQIs) to shoot up into the 100s - 150, athletic department staff are inand in some cities, such as Ashland, structed to take students inside the Oregon, even the 200s - for days at a gym. Myers said that the P.E. departtime in early August. According to P.E. teacher Mi- ment has had to do this only twice chelle Myers, AQIs above 100 are in the 30 years she’s been at Country

Day. Senior Emily Hayes used a similar system while running a day camp last summer for 4- to 12-year-olds at Glen Oaks Swim & Tennis Club (4301 Paradise Drive). Hayes said that because she worked in an old facility (built in the ’50s), the children couldn’t go inside and were stuck in the smoke. “All we could do was just keep them from running around and keep them cool,” Hayes said. “The kids were fine, but I got so tired from (the smoke) that my chest was hurting by the end of every day. “I was coughing and wheezing. The pollen from the trees - that’s always been there. But that and the ash from the trees really gums up the lungs.” Echoing Hayes’s sentiments, Myers said that the AQI number doesn’t begin to describe smoke’s harmful effects. AQI, according to the Environmental Protection Agency, combines ozone and particulate matter (PM) readings; smoke raises PM readings, of which there are two: 10PM (inhalable particles 10 micrometers and under) and 2.5PM (fine particles under 2.5 micrometers). “2.5PM particles lead to increased hospitalization for respiratory issues; they’re so small that they bypass the body’s defenses,” Myers said. “10PM particles are more likely to deposit in places in the upper respiratory system, leading to tissue dam-

age and lung inflammation.” It’s these risks that made senior Eivind Sommerhaug’s summer even more painful than expected. Sommerhaug underwent the nuss procedure (a nickel bar inserted near the lungs) to fix his pectus excavatum in mid-July, just as the fires began to increase. “It is really tough to breathe,” Sommerhaug said. “My lungs right now can’t expand to their full capacity, and I’ve had to exercise my breathing.” The smoke exacerbated his already tired lungs, he said. “People cough in smoke, which makes the metal bars hurt a lot, like a knife digging into my chest,” he said. “The smoke triggered that.” To minimize the coughing and accompanying pain, Sommerhaug’s parents kept the single-pane window in their house down. But as that wasn’t “fully protective,” the Sommerhaugs vacationed to Santa Cruz in pursuit of clearer skies. Senior Sophie Naylor’s 70-yearold grandmother, a resident of Jacksonville, Oregon, was also one of those in the “sensitive group” category. In late July, several southern Oregon cities, namely Jacksonville and Ashland, were announced as areas “unhealthy for kids and elderly,” so many residents were encouraged to evacuate, Naylor said.

ASHY page 4 >>

The Octagon got its yearly critique from the National Scholastic Press Association (NSPA). It received a perfect composite score and five marks of distinction, earning the paper an All-American, the highest rating NSPA gives to publications. For an in-depth look at the critique via editors and advisers old and new, go to www.scdsoctagon. com or use the QR code above.

INSIDE News....................1-3 Centerpoint..........4-5 Sports........................6 Opinion.....................7 Backpage................8


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Octagon 2018-19 Issue 1 by The Octagon - Issuu