Oak Leaf Fall 2016 Issue 3

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Santa Rosa Junior College’s Newspaper

The

Oak

Leaf

Saving Andy’s legacy

www.theoakleafnews.com

October 10, 2016

Volume CXXXVI, Issue III

James Wyatt/ Oak Leaf

The site of Andy Lopez’s death in 2013 will become a new park with a $1.2 million grant from the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors. The park will feature a community garden, a skate park, dog park and a basketball court.

James Wyatt Staff Writer After 13-year-old Santa Rosa middle-schooler Andy Lopez was shot by a police officer in October 2013, a new generation of the city’s Latinos are responding to the decades-long issue of civil rights for minorities in the U.S.

HOPE: Beatriz Verneaux Staff Writer

Student Support Services TRiO Health Occupation Preparation Education Program (HOPE) is returning to Santa Rosa Junior College this fall to advocate for minority and underserved students interested in careers in health sciences. Program Director Jeannie Dulberg is a former SRJC graduate whose passion to serve the community brought her back to reopen the program that caters to first generation, low-income

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“Andy Lopez’s death was definitely the tipping point,” said Hernan Rai Zaragoza Lemus, vice president of advocacy at Santa Rosa Junior College. “It’s unfortunate we had to lose a life for people to realize they need to get involved in their community—but there is a flower blossoming from this.” A generation of young Latino students are advocating for

equity and a louder voice in their community. Supporters like Lemus have spurred change in the community by seeking out new leadership roles. “When the youth became engaged and questioned authority, it was a wake-up call to me,” Lemus said. “I’m only a year older than some of these kids, and what am I doing to help? Seeing them

organize protests and seeing them stand up made me feel like I needed to stand up, too.” Santa Rosa’s Latino youth have become more engaged in the issues their community faces after the trauma of Lopez’s death. They have come to realize the slow nature of the democratic process is won through persistence and presence. “To this day there’s still a

big push [for justice],” Lemus said. “There’s a group of Latino students from middle schools and high schools that still talk about Andy Lopez’s death. They don’t see it as brown versus white; they see from a standpoint of ‘How are we going to find a solution?’” Continued on Page 2...

New center reaches out to minority health students students and students with disabilities. A successful program existed, but it ended due to lack of funds to keep it. The college brought back the successful initiative thanks to $1.1 million in TRiO grants, as well as a generous grant from Kaiser Permanente regional offices, which focuses on high school programs. The program supports high school and SRJC students taking science classes. It also supports participants up to four years after they’ve completed the program at SRJC. It works as a tool to invest in helping young career professionals to enter

their career with fewer outside stresses. “It’s a wonderful program,” Dulberg said. Although the center is currently at capacity, students are encouraged to apply for upcoming semesters, and Dulberg expects to interview newcomers during the spring semester. “The majority of students face financial challenges,” Dulberg said. To ensure students’ ability to focus on education, Kaiser Permanente provides a limited emergency fund to help with difficulties.

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Arthur Gonzalez-Martin/ Oak Leaf

HOPE program director Jeannie Dulberg, right, with a new student, wants to see more minority students enter professions like nursing and medical assisting.

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