Wednesday, November 7, 2007

The border between high-school &, well, the border

High-school: the nebulous border-region between childhood and adulthood,
where hormones and angst build fences
while attempting to tear down walls,
and 'education' tries to stick its head into the crossfire,
a vast social experiment carried out in mall-bought finery...

I submit, then, two local newspaper articles--one from yesterday's evening paper, one from today's moring daily--dealing with a regional peculiarity that might resonate more in far-away places than it would have a few years ago, when immigration was not as much of a 'hot plate hot plate' as it is now...

(after the articles, some photo-minutiae...)
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TUSD: Rumor that schools are being raided not true
MARY BUSTAMANTE and SHERYL KORNMAN

Tucson Citizen 11-06-07

An incident in which a family returned to Mexico after a son was allegedly caught with marijuana at a Tucson high school prompted a rumor that schools are being raided and children are being removed. It's untrue, police, border agents and educators say.

On Thursday, a family of four that admitted to being in the United States illegally for six years left after police were called to Catalina High Magnet School because a student was acting incoherently and was found in possession of marijuana, police and school officials said.
When police determined he and his family were here without documentation, they called the U.S. Border Patrol, said Tucson police Assistant Chief Roberto Villaseñor.

"We are not patrolling the schools," said Border Patrol spokesman Jose A. Gonzalez. "I've never heard of this ever happening. To my knowledge, it's very rare."
Villaseñor agreed.

"We don't actively seek out and enforce immigration violations because we don't want to put a chilling effect on any segment of the population that may need the services of public safety," he said.
Still, he added, "it is appropriate (when officers are investigating other crimes, such as the marijuana possession) to contact other law enforcement agencies when we come across violations of other laws that they have jurisdiction over."

All public and charter school districts are forbidden by law to deny an education to any child of school age residing in Arizona, said an official at the Tucson Unified School District.

"Police were at the school only because the student was acting incoherently," said TUSD spokeswoman Chyrl Hill Lander.

"The rumor was that there was a raid, and that was not the case," she said. "We aren't even allowed to ask the question if they are in this country illegally."

Lander said she hoped the rumors would not make parents stop sending their children to school or stop them from coming for parent-teacher conferences or other events.
"Schools have always been considered a safe haven," she said.

In this case, Lander said, "the parents were only there because the son was being charged with possession and he was going to be released into their custody."

The situation occurred at TUSD's Catalina High Magnet, 3645 E. Pima St.
The 17-year-old's parents were called in when school officials found a "small amount" of marijuana in his backpack after a monitor noticed the boy "appeared to be under the influence of something," Lander said.

He was taken to the principal's office and the Tucson Police Department was called, she said.
By the time officers arrived, the parents also had been called and had arrived, Villaseñor said. When neither the parents nor student spoke English, a translator was called in, he said.

When the parents, a 38-year-old mother and 39-year-old father, could not provide police with driver's licenses, they admitted they had been in the United States illegally and didn't have green cards or other documentation allowing them to be here, Villaseñor said.

At that point, police called the Border Patrol, and the parents and son were taken into their custody.
They requested that they be able to pick up their other son, a sixth-grader at Doolen Middle School, 2400 N. Country Club Road. Border Patrol agents took them there to get him.

While the older son was given a paper referral to appear in Pima County Juvenile Court on a charge of narcotics possession, Villaseñor said, "If they are all back in Mexico, I don't think there will be any follow-up."
Gonzalez said the parents had no criminal records. The father, however, had been previously deported to Mexico "several times" and had an administrative order to be sent back. The other family members agreed to go back voluntarily, he said.

They were driven by the Border Patrol to a Nogales port of entry that same day and released to walk across the border into Mexico, Gonzalez said.

He said this action does not prevent any of them from returning to the United States as legal residents, "provided they follow the rules next time."

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Protest yields entrant-policy change
Student march decries Border Patrol presence
By George B. Sánchez and Dale Quinn
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona Published: 11.07.2007

The Tucson Police Department and the Tucson Unified School District no longer will summon Border Patrol officials or immigration authorities to school grounds, officials said Tuesday.


The announcement came hours after dozens of students marched against a family's deportation that played out at two Midtown schools.

Nearly 100 students assembled outside Catalina Magnet High School early Tuesday and marched Downtown to the Federal Building and eventually Tucson police headquarters, protesting the process that allowed U.S. Border Patrol agents onto their campus.

The student march was sparked by the Thursday deportation of a Catalina student and his family after school officials found a small amount of marijuana in the boy's backpack. The officials called police, who notified the Border Patrol after learning that his family was living here illegally. The family's younger son, attending Doolen Middle School, also was pulled from class and deported.

"We're mad because immigration came into our school," said 16-year-old Mario Portillo, one of the protesting students. "The kid broke the law. He was wrong. This isn't about him."

The effect has been chilling, one of Portillo's classmates said.

"Some students aren't going to school because they don't feel safe," said Lizeth Grijalva, 17. "We can't have this at schools."

TUSD Superintendent Roger Pfeuffer and Assistant Police Chief Roberto Villaseñor met late Tuesday morning to discuss the incident.

"They came to an agreement that what happened on Thursday will not happen on a campus again," said Chyrl Hill Lander, a TUSD spokeswoman. "The implementation of immigration law will not be done on school grounds."

Tucson police officers no longer will call Border Patrol agents to schools or churches, Villaseñor said. However, police will provide information to the federal government that will allow those officials to follow up on the investigation, he said. The change is based on Border Patrol policy not to respond to schools or churches unless agents are asked to do so.

Under the new policy, Border Patrol agents never would have been called to Catalina, 3645 E. Pima St., although the family of the boy who allegedly brought pot to campus still may have been deported.
Amy Rezzonico, a spokeswoman for the Arizona Department of Education, said she had not heard of deportations resulting from an on-campus incident. School officials are forbidden to ask about a student's legal status, she noted.

"We can't ask. That is a federal law," she said. "We educate students regardless."

Warren Allison, TUSD's school-safety coordinator, said school officials had to contact police because the student was caught with drugs.

"By state law, if you have contraband, we have to call the police," he said. "After that, it's on them."
As students gathered in front of Police Department headquarters, 270 S. Stone Ave., Pfeuffer relayed the same message.

Grijalva, a senior, said the students wanted an explanation from police about why Border Patrol agents were notified this time.

Villaseñor said the arresting officer learned through the course of the investigation that the boy and his family were in the country illegally.

"We are obligated to notify the proper authorities when we become aware of criminal activity," he said.
When some of the protesting students learned of the new policy, they said they were glad it barred immigration officials from schools, but they remained concerned about local police enforcing federal immigration laws.
"I still think the Police Department shouldn't be allowed to ask someone about their citizenship," Portillo said. "That's not their job. Their job is to keep us safe and ensure our rights."

The students said they began organizing the march late last week by sending each other text messages and e-mails.

As the students marched through the streets Tuesday, they chanted, "Sí se puede" and "We are students, not criminals," and carried signs that read: "Migra out of our schools."

Villaseñor and Pfeuffer both acknowledged that the students had protested peacefully and sparked an insightful discussion. Pfeuffer also told the students that it's important to have these kinds of talks in a school setting, not just during protests.

TUSD's regular absence policy will apply to students who took part in the nearly five-mile march, Lander said. A student with a parent's note or whose parents called to explain the absence will be excused.
No attendance numbers were available Tuesday, Lander said, but Catalina has 1,482 enrolled.
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...now, on to the pretty pictures...

(Incidentally, the high-temperature yesterday was 91--a record-high for early November, even for Tucson.)

This past weekend--a true Sunday drive--pure curiosity--driven by the desire to 'see the other side,' the other side of the Catalina mountains. So--around the newer suburbs to the NW, to see the 'backside' of the mountains:The peaks in this section, near Catalina state park, are quite dramatic, no?

Speaking of seeing 'the other side,' we saw this also, when we visited the Tohono Chul Botanical gardens and gallery on the way back:

The 'Day of the Dead' is, ahem, alive and well in Tucson--Mexico's pre-Columbian tradition is as much a part of southern Arizona as the saguaro...Isn't it interesting that all over the world, around October-November, there are 'day-of-the-dead'-type celebrations?...The altar set up with photos, flowers, and favorite foods reminds me very much of all the "Chu-sok" festival altars I've seen in Korea in the autumn...Koreans and Mexicans share more than chili-pepper-fondness...Red peppers and ancestor-worship, on both sides of the Pacific...

...and an agave close-up. What the Sonoran desert lacks in lushness, it makes up for with textures...I love the 'echoes' etched onto the back of the leaves, like an ex-ray of the sunlit barbs...(a tequila sunprint?)

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