Los Angeles Times

Schools grappling with trauma, space shortage

Districts are working anxiously to get back on track

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Howard Blume

PARADISE, Calif. — As this region still reels from the worst fire in California history, educators are faced with the challengin­g task of reopening schools even as the firefighte­rs continue their work and searchers scour the area for more victims.

Butte County’s countywide public school system has been closed since the start of the Camp fire Nov. 8. Officials said the hope is to reopen Dec. 3.

They are working to identify replacemen­t classroom space for schools that were burned to ashes.

Paradise Unified School District was hardest hit, with multiple school buildings lost to the fires. Charter schools also suffered.

“This is the equivalent to setting up a school district in two weeks. There are a lot of logistics, and we want to assure you that we’re on it,” Mary Sakuma, deputy superinten­dent at the Butte County Office of Education, said last week.

Authoritie­s are also assembling trauma counselors to be available at schools.

“This is not just about buildings,” she said. “Our staff, parents and students have undergone tremendous trauma. We can’t just come back to school after Thanksgivi­ng like we used to.”

Paradise Unified is now operating out of a temporary location and said in a letter to parents several days ago that it was on the hunt for classroom space.

“We can tell you that we have secured locations within Butte County that will allow us to have PUSD

teachers in classrooms with PUSD students. We are also working on eliminatin­g transporta­tion barriers for our PUSD students so that they will be able to get to these new sites,” the letter said.

School officials have been asking for donations and other forms of support. Rancho Santa Fe businessma­n Bob Wilson has promised to donate $1 million to the students and employees of Paradise High School, one of the few campuses to survive the flames.

The fire burned nearly 14,000 homes in the Paradise area and left more than 80 people dead with hundreds still missing.

Educators in the areas burned by the Woolsey fire in Southern California are dealing with less dire but also difficult issues.

Schools in Malibu survived almost intact but they got very dirty, and cleanup efforts will keep campuses closed even as residents are allowed to return to their properties.

The fire killed three people, burned nearly 97,000 acres and destroyed 1,600 structures. Malibu’s four schools have been closed since Nov. 9, when they were included in the mandatory evacuation zones.

The tentative date to reopen Webster Elementary is Nov. 28. Point Dume Marine Science School is scheduled to reopen Dec. 3. Juan Cabrillo Elementary should be ready between Dec. 3 and Dec. 5, pending results of air testing for traces of lead, asbestos and polychlori­nated biphenyls. Malibu High will be back in business between Dec. 4 and Dec. 10.

The district had planned a swifter reopening but slowed down out of an abundance of caution, spokeswoma­n Gail Pinsker said.

“We are hearing from parents that they want thorough cleaning and testing, which we plan, but the cleaning and testing and waiting for results take a day to more than a week,” she said.

Three other districts in the region also had closed campuses. Schools in Conejo Valley Unified, Oak Park Unified and Las Virgenes Unified are aiming to reopen Monday.

Residents who had to evacuate included Las Virgenes Supt. Daniel Stepenosky, who estimated that about 90 families with district students lost their homes, as did two staff members.

In an update on social media, he said everyone is eager for schools to reopen: “Everyone wants to get back to a state of normalcy, to be honest with you.”

To that end, a crew of 200 has been working for several days, and the district had brought in 300 air scrubbers and 300 hydroxyl deodorizer­s. Playground­s that are not ready by Monday will be cordoned off.

Stepenosky said that a “full-court press” will continue because “the schools are really boring when they’re empty.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? DISPLACED BY the Camp fire, a Paradise High basketball team practices at nearby Chico High School last week. Butte County schools hope to reopen Dec. 3.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times DISPLACED BY the Camp fire, a Paradise High basketball team practices at nearby Chico High School last week. Butte County schools hope to reopen Dec. 3.
 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? GOV. JERRY BROWN surveys damage from the Camp fire last week at Paradise Elementary School.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times GOV. JERRY BROWN surveys damage from the Camp fire last week at Paradise Elementary School.

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