New policies for students, staff at schools
Students
and staff returning to campuses in the Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified
School District soon will follow newly revised policies regarding
tobacco products, discrimination and truancy, as school leadership
wisely responds to rapid changes in technology, culture and law.
The
district's five elected trustees approved first readings of the three
policy revisions at the Aug. 20 meeting, with routine
second readings scheduled at a Sept. 10 session.
Trends
in tobacco technology have led to an expanded definition of tobacco
products to be placed in the district's prior declaration of “tobacco
free schools” for students, staff and all adult visitors, with a
specific ban naming e-cigarettes, among other tobacco-related items.
Previously,
the policy prohibited “the possession and/or use of any tobacco
substances by students, staff or non-student adults while on school
grounds, in school buildings or at school-sponsored activities, or
while under the supervision and control of school district
employees.”
Now, the
revised policy adds as “prohibited products” any “containing
tobacco or nicotine, including, but not limited to, cigarettes,
cigars, miniature cigars, smokeless tobacco, snuff, chew, clove
cigarettes and betel.” Also banned are “vaporizing delivery
devices such as electronic cigarettes.”
Enforcement
will include actions outlined in separate suspension and expulsion
policies.
The
revised non-discrimination policy adds several specific terms,
including “gender identity” and “gender expression,” to the
text that “guarantees equal employment and opportunity for
advancement to all,” reflecting newer provisions in the state
Education Code.
Previously,
the “equal employment opportunity” policy listed “race,
religious creed, national origin, ancestry, physical handicap, age or
sex” as the banned basis for jobs or promotions.
Now, a
lengthier list includes “the person's actual or perceived race,
religious creed, color, national origin, ancestry, age, marital
status, pregnancy, physical or mental disability, med- ical
condition, genetic information, veteran status, gender, gender
identity, gender express-ion, sex or sexual orientation.”
Other
new provisions outline various types of employment discrimination and
“unwelcome verbal, physical or visual conduct” that could
adversely affect employment opportunities or work performance or
create “an intimidating, hostile or offensive work environment.”
Penalty
for an offending employee or a worker who “aids, abets, incites,
compels or coerces” another person to engage in banned behavior can
be severe, “up to and including dismissal.”
The
“attendance and excuses” policy adopted in 1968 and last revised
in 1979 added seven sentences focusing on accurately tracking and
monitoring attendance, developing strategies for prevention and early
intervention and collaborating with community agencies.
Schools
will work with students and parents to identify factors contributing
to absenteeism and truancy and act with various agencies “to ensure
that alternative education programs and nutrition, health care and
other support services are available to intervene as necessary when
students have serious attendance problems.”
But “as
required by law,” habitual truants will be referred to an
attendance review board, a county truancy
mediation program and/or a juvenile court.
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