Bay State Banner 1-14-2016

Page 1

inside this week

Activists: Discrimination runs deep at Police Academy pg 2

INSIDE

business news

A SPECIAL TRIBUTE TO DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. pg 22

State, local officials seek opportunities for local medical tech businesses pg 15

A&E

Foreign-language film ‘Mustang’ pg 28 ‘Firefight’ pg 30 Multicultural Children’s Book Day pg 32 Thursday, January 14, 2016 • FREE • GREATER BOSTON’S URBAN NEWS SOURCE SINCE 1965 • CELEBRATING 50 YEARS

www.baystatebanner.com

Principals brace for drastic cuts

‘I was forced to leave …’

BPS budget shortfall may force as many as 150 layoffs By YAWU MILLER BANNER PHOTO

“I was forced to leave because of the violence,” Saúl, a Guatemalan who fled to the U.S. two-and-a-half months ago to escape gang threats, said through a translator. He joined activists at a vigil protesting new immigration raids that struck nationally. FULL STORY ON PAGE 3

How rising homelessness strikes Boston’s students City councilors, schools look to tackle growing crisis By JULE PATTISON-GORDON

Neema Avashia, grade 8 civics teacher at John W. McCormack Middle School, had a problem. It was the third month of the 2014 school year and she had a student who continued to fall asleep nearly every class. Had it been early in her teaching career, Avashia might have worried her

class was boring. But by then it was her 12th year of teaching and she knew something was up. The student, Avashia found out, was living out of a car. Since losing their home, the student’s family slept in their car most nights. The girl did not always have somewhere to brush her teeth or wash her clothes, let alone a quiet place to do homework. She was just one of many

Boston students living without a stable living place. This year Avashia has four eighth graders without permanent housing, including a 14-year-old boy forced to live in the same room as his mother — something that obviously raises tensions in the relationship. Across Boston Public Schools

See HOMELESS, page 10

A steady stream of Boston Public Schools principals marched into the Bruce Bolling Municipal Building last week to discuss how the estimated $40 million in cuts to this year’s BPS budget would affect their schools. As news of deep cuts spread, parent organizers began piecing together a picture of a challenging fiscal year 2017 for the school system. While school department officials have made no official announcements of the cuts, parent activists say high schools will absorb $7 million of the cuts, and more than 20 schools will receive cuts of 5 percent or greater. Additionally, the school department is expected to increase class sizes for Special Education students, upping the student-toteacher ratio from 9-1 to 10-1. In a statement released to the Banner, Superintendent Tommy Chang acknowledged the severity of the cuts. “Boston Public Schools is entering a difficult budget scenario for Fiscal Year 2017,” Chang said.

BY THE NUMBERS Among the cuts parent activists have reported are:

$800,000

cut from the budget of Boston Community Leadership Academy

$700,000 $500,000 $250,000 $200,000 cut from Boston Latin School

cut from Boston Latin Academy

cut from the Boston Teachers Union Academy

cut from the Patrick Lyndon School

“Despite our projected financial obstacles, our schools remain strong and our commitment to excellence in teaching and learning continues. I have been touched by the tremendous efforts of our school leaders to engage in a thoughtful and caring dialogue

See SCHOOL CUTS, page 36

Cops release FIO data By YAWU MILLER

After 16 months of advocacy and a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, the Boston Police Department last week released five years of data from its Field Intelligence Observation database showing persistent disparities between the rates at which blacks and whites are stopped, observed, questioned and searched by police. Additionally, entries in the database raise troubling questions about whether Boston police

officers are violating Fourth Amendment rights against unlawful search and seizure. In more than 70 percent of the database entries, officers listed their reason for stopping people as “investigate a person.” Under U.S. law, police officers cannot detain suspects for questioning against their will unless they can cite what’s called a reasonable suspicion that that person has committed or is about to commit a crime. Police officers are either not

See POLICE, page 19

BANNER PHOTO

Boston Police Officers detain a suspect in this 2015 photo. While blacks make up 24 percent of the city’s population, they represent 58 percent of pedestrians and drivers stopped, detained, questioned and searched by police.


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