Boston Herald

BPS cuts ties, starts probe of nonprofit

- By ALEXI COHAN

‘I see BPS’ actions as nothing more than a temporary solution ...’ CHARLENE ADAMES-PIMENTEL Latin Academy senior

Boston Public Schools has launched an outside investigat­ion and suspended its relationsh­ip with a nonprofit organizati­on that students claimed emotionall­y manipulate­d and silenced them.

“Although this may sound like good news, I personally don’t see BPS ever doing enough action to ensure these types of structures don’t occur again,” Boston Latin Academy senior Charlene Adames-Pimentel said.

She added, “I see BPS’ actions as nothing more than a temporary solution and a way to quiet down the situation.”

Adames-Pimental is one of several students who recently resigned from the Boston Student Advisory Council, a body of elected student leaders which Somerville nonprofit Youth On Board co-administer­s with the district.

“While I am glad they are not dismissing the concerns raised by students. I have to say BPS’ solutions are both imperfect and unsatisfac­tory,” said former BSAC member Naesoj Ware.

The students said Youth On Board leadership has often censored their remarks and silenced their ideas. Students also said peer counseling sessions with the organizati­on were emotionall­y manipulati­ve and uncomforta­ble.

Shortly following last week’s student resignatio­ns, the district has suspended its work with Youth On Board pending an outside investigat­ion, according to a BPS spokesman.

The peer counseling sessions, which students said were held in the basement of Youth On Board director and co-founder Jenny Sazama’s home, will no longer be offered to BSAC members.

Sazama said in a statement, “We stand by the quality and integrity of our program and the reputation we have built over 30 years, and we welcome any outside investigat­ion.” The BPS contract with Youth on Board is $20,500.

Not all BSAC students chose to resign, though.

While current BSAC members agree with the other students that their voices were silenced and that peer counseling was “immoral,” they are hoping to stay and change the program with a set of demands.

The demands include giving the students more power along with the resignatio­n of Sazama and terminatio­n of the partnershi­p between BPS and Youth on Board.

Dorian Levy, BSAC member and freshman at Boston Community Leadership Academy said, “I’m staying to make sure BSAC is reformed to its full glory and that this never happens to another student again.”

But moving forward isn’t easy. Samuel Draisen, a senior at Boston Latin Academy said, “We didn’t realize the extent to which the adults would, you know, try and silence moderate us and control everything we were working on … it’s hitting us all at once.”

 ?? HERALD STAFF FILE ?? HARD STOP: Boston Public Schools has ended relations with Youth On Board, a Somerville nonprofit, and has started an investigat­ion into student complaints that the counsellin­g service emotionall­y manipulate­d them.
HERALD STAFF FILE HARD STOP: Boston Public Schools has ended relations with Youth On Board, a Somerville nonprofit, and has started an investigat­ion into student complaints that the counsellin­g service emotionall­y manipulate­d them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States