Los Angeles Times

A promise to neighborho­ods

Obama administra­tion OKd five-year payout. Its fate under Trump remains to be seen.

- By Sonali Kohli sonali.kohli@latimes.com Twitter: @Sonali_Kohli

A $30-million federal grant will aid eight schools with large Latino population­s.

As President Trump signed executive orders to strengthen immigratio­n enforcemen­t and deny funding to “sanctuary cities,” L.A.’s mayor and school officials gathered to celebrate a $30million federal grant to help students in eight schools with large Latino population­s and reaffirmed their commitment to protecting immigrant students and their families.

The nonprofit Youth Policy Institute was awarded a $30-million Promise Neighborho­od grant from the U.S. Department of Education under the Obama administra­tion to provide academic, health and legal services to about 4,000 students attending eight public and charter schools in Pico-Union and Hollywood. The money is supposed to be parceled out over five years, starting in 2017. The organizati­on received a similar grant in 2013 for 18 schools in Hollywood and Pacoima.

The funding is expected to pay for resources such as college advisors, mental health counselors and AmeriCorps tutors, and to keep schools open early in the mornings, after school and on weekends to serve as community centers where families can seek health, housing and other services, said Dixon Slingerlan­d, Youth Policy Institute’s president and chief executive. The organizati­on plans to guarantee two years of community college tuition to students within the Promise Neighborho­od, he said.

Slingerlan­d said he expects to see the funding come through even though a different administra­tion is running the Department of Education, in part because the Promise Neighborho­od initiative has strong Republican backing in Congress and serves rural communitie­s in addition to liberal, urban cities like Los Angeles. The $30 million is supplement­ed by private donations, he said, which help fund many of the programs.

“We don’t believe that the new administra­tion has come into power to break promises to the most vulnerable children of our nation,” said L.A. Unified school board President Steve Zimmer. The last Promise Neighborho­od grant in 2013, Zimmer said, brought with it college support, counseling, parenting classes and health resources for students and families in Hollywood and Pacoima.

If the federal government does try to withhold funding and grants because the city has committed to protecting its immigrant population, the city will fight back, Mayor Eric Garcetti said.

“We will defend you and your families,” Garcetti told a crowd of about 100 city and school officials, students and parents at Berendo Middle School on Wednesday morning. “We will have lawyers…. We will fight in the courts.”

Pico-Union is a heavily Latino neighborho­od, and Berendo Middle School is home to numerous immigrant families and unaccompan­ied minors. Principal Ruth Trujillo and her staff work to prepare students for high school in the hopes they will graduate in four years. But many schools in L.A. Unified don’t have the resources to pay for counselors, tutors and health services that can help these students succeed, she said.

Trujillo recently received a call about a child who had crossed the border into Texas without an adult, gone to New York and now was heading to Pico-Union and enrolling in her school.

“I can’t imagine being unaccompan­ied,” Trujillo said. “The trauma and the impact that would have.”

The L.A. Unified school board has declared schools “safe zones,” and district staff are preparing resource guides for those in the country without legal papers and for mixed-status families, Erika Torres, L.A. Unified executive director of student health and human services, said last week. The district also is developing training and reference guides for school staff members about how to respond to deportatio­ns or threats of deportatio­n affecting their students.

‘We will defend you and your families. We will have lawyers…. We will fight in the courts.’

—Eric Garcetti, L.A.’s mayor, to city and school officials, students and parents at Berendo Middle School

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE GRANT will help students in eight schools with large Latino population­s. Above, Berendo Middle School’s Phyllis Lott, left, greets sixth-grader Aracely Chimil before Wednesday’s gathering at the school.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE GRANT will help students in eight schools with large Latino population­s. Above, Berendo Middle School’s Phyllis Lott, left, greets sixth-grader Aracely Chimil before Wednesday’s gathering at the school.

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