Los Angeles Times

Busing: It’s complicate­d

- Scott Perley

Re “Don’t romanticiz­e busing,” Opinion, July 7

In the 1970s, I was a teacher and part-time counselor for a San Fernando Valley middle school that was in a pilot program to bus in African American students.

A significan­t amount of planning was involved. Our school was matched with an inner-city campus based on socioecono­mic factors. Among the two schools, there was about the same mix of parents who were doctors, lawyers, accountant­s and bluecollar workers. Essentiall­y, students from both schools had similar values and skills.

For the first few years,

the program worked quite well. However, there were some unexpected problems later on. Many more low-income students were bused in, requiring a significan­t adjustment by both sets of students. Fights, verbal confrontat­ions, poor study habits and lack of parental support came into play.

It took about a year for us to work through the problems. Overall, I’d say the busing experience was quite positive. If it wasn’t for the traffic and lengthy commute times, busing students could improve race relations.

Jerry Rosenstein

Los Angeles

Busing is a complicate­d issue, and for Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) to attack former Vice President Joe Biden during a debate and make the issue simply one of racism and bigotry betrays an inability to listen to the other side.

I can think of myriad reasons why white people would not want their kids bused to a school in another neighborho­od. And, according to op-ed article writer Sandy Banks, most black families did not like busing either.

Much of President Trump’s appeal relies on white people who feel marginaliz­ed by elitists and do not like having their views dismissed as racist. If Harris gets onto the Democratic ticket, it will be a gold mine for Trump.

Tom Magdaleno

Camarillo

What a treat to turn to the Op-Ed page and find Banks’ clear-eyed and fresh take on a current issue. Boy, do we need a writer like her now.

Bruce Johnson

San Diego

Re “An issue bigger than busing,” July 8

Absent from the news article on school desegregat­ion and busing was any mention of the quality of the education students receive.

Further, using the term “segregatio­n” implies an intentiona­l, or forced, separation of races and lays the foundation for a government-imposed solution to a poorly defined “problem.”

Transferri­ng a student from a predominan­tly Latino or African American school to a campus with a different ethnic makeup may improve chances for success, but the primary reason will more likely be the quality of the education, not the integratio­n effect.

Additional­ly, the student displaced by the transfer is just as likely to receive a lower-quality education as a result. Integratio­n solely for the purpose of integratio­n is not a solution to any problem.

Irvine

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