Tiger Newspaper September 2018

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“Empowering students to think critically and creatively since 1913.”

VOLUME 105 ISSUE 1 SEPTEMBER 11, 2018

IN THE NEWS

SOUTH PASADENA HIGH SCHOOL 1401 FREMONT AVE, SOUTH PASADENA, CA 91030

Club Rush

College Night

STEM Construction

SPHS’ array of clubs gather today and tomorrow in the gym to invite students to join their organizations.

The SPHS Counseling Department will host seniors in the auditorium for an informational meeting tomorrow.

STEM building work forges on, finishing 50% of the roof and beginning floor construction.

Shooting aftermath: what warrants a lockdown

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n officer-involved shooting on the 1100 block of Fremont Avenue resulted in one fatality on Thursday, Aug. 30. The incident, which happened only two blocks away from SPHS, occurred around 2 p.m., yet those present on campus, including teachers and students, were not notified nor placed under any security measures. SPUSD has placed schools under lockdowns due to causes ranging from police activity near campus to social media threats. In 2017, threatening emails of gun violence placed SPHS into soft lockdown. This reportedly lasted until after the suspect was located miles away from campus and apprehended by police. With the recent police activity on Fremont and a look into SPHS’ past safety occurrences, it is unclear to many students, parents, and even staff, what type of situation warrants what precautions. Although a look into SPUSD’s policies helps us gain further understanding into why threats in the past have justified the actions of the school. The procedure of locking classroom doors but continuing with instruction, known as a soft lockout, will be implemented “when there is a potential threat or police activity on or off school grounds,” according to the 2018-2019 emergency procedures for SPHS. “When an extraordinary event occurs on or off school ground,” an announcement of a hard lockdown will go over the intercom and alert students to close all window blinds, lock all doors, and

STORY ADAM KWOH PHOTOS TIGER PHOTOGRAPHERS hide in the furthest corner of the classroom. Extraordinary events that might activate a hard lockdown would be “a major fight or riotous situation, unauthorized person on campus with a weapon, shots fired or potential for shots to be fired, and police activity on or near campus.” Regarding Thursday’s incident, the district, along with the South Pasadena Police Department (SPPD) determined that any safety threat that the situation posed was under control and therefore did not call for any procedures to be executed on school campus. According to Assistant Principal of Student Services David Speck, clarification and approval for safety emergencies must be confirmed by the SPPD for the majority of situations. Investigation will typically be conducted before action for all threats, including those online and activity near campus. “We had immediate contact with the school resource officer and the police and we got immediate notification that the situation was already contained to one location,” Mr. Speck said. “If we did feel like there was a threat that was going to affect our campus, we would go on a soft lockout. We take all threats equally as seriously… [student] safety is important to us.”

CLUB RUSH

ADD/DROP

Tiger highlights some new and returning organizations ahead of Club Rush, including the new club Challenge Success.

Tiger’s staff editorial probes the reasoning behind the unpopular new scheduling policy changes, and explores possible solutions.

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TIGERNEWSPAPER.COM

“LOVE & PEACE” Staff Writer Audrey Ernst highlights Dual Crossroads, the Mission St. shop with an array of spiritual supplies and workshops that cleanse the mind. Page 10


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