Gunn students get involved with politics.
Second semester senior plays sport for the first time.
PG. 15 FEATURES
PG. 17 SPORTS
Palo Alto Unified School District Henry M. Gunn High School 780 Arastradero Rd Palo Alto, CA 94306
NON-PROFIT ORG U.S. Postage
PA I D Permit #44 Palo Alto, Calif.
THEORACLE Henry M. Gunn High School
http://gunnoracle.com/
Friday, February 3, 2017 Volume 54, Issue 5
780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306
A NEW HOPE FOR BUENA VISTA
Evalyn Li and Ayala Tzadikario Reporters In 2012, the owner of the Buena Vista Mobile Home, the Jisser family, submitted an application for the closure of the property. This past December, the Santa Clara County Superior Court rejected the application and the Housing Authority of the County of Santa Clara offered $36 million to buy it from the Jissers. Amidst the four-year-long uncertainty of the future of Buena Vista, a conversation involving affordable housing, education and private property owners’ rights has surfaced. In 2015, the Jissers sued the City of Palo Alto after the city required the family to pay a relocation fees to residents. Throughout the process, Buena Vista advocates and residents voiced concern about preserving housing for the mobile park’s low-income residents and maintaining access to local schools for residents. Executive Director of the Housing Authority Katherine Harasz says that the Housing Authority is a local independent government agency that recognizes that many families and individuals cannot afford the current rent or cost of buying of a home. “It’s important that everyone be in a home,” she said. “This requires dedicating public resources to subsidize either the rent someone would have to pay, or the cost of building the rental housing so that a provider can charge a rent that they can afford or, by the same token, create a housing resource that they can afford.” Harasz attributes the need for affordable housing to the low supply of housing compared to the high number of jobs available. Far more people move here than there are housing opportunities available, so they agree to pay a higher rent, pushing out others’ offers. “Folks who don’t have a lot of salary power are literally outside without a home because they can’t afford the rent or they can’t compete in this rental market,” Harasz said. According to community activist Winter Dellenbach, people don’t understand the importance and the contributions of the Buena Vista community. “The residents work hard, sometimes at multiple jobs, some at our schools and many here in Palo Alto,” Dellenbach said. BUENA VISTA—p.3
Max Wang
School Board affirms sanctuary school status Maya Rapoport Reporter
During the Palo Alto Unified Board of Education meeting on Jan. 10, the Board unanimously approved a resolution affirming support of undocumented students and families and making Palo Alto Unified School District (PAUSD) schools “sanctuary schools” for immigrants. The resolution was approved two weeks before President Donald Trump signed executive orders to increase deportations of undocumented immigrants, begin construction of a wall on the US-Mexican border, in-
crease border patrol and reduce funding to “sanctuary” cities, such as San Francisco, which have adopted a policy of protecting undocumented immigrants by not prosecuting them for violating federal immigration laws. According to Palo Alto Online, there are an estimated 142,000 undocumented immigrants living in Santa Clara County. On Jan. 28, Trump also barred refugees from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Sudan, Libya, Yemen and Somalia for the next 90 days and suspended the admission of all refugees for the next 120 days. According to Board Member Melissa Baten-Caswell, she and
Board President Terry Godfrey drafted the resolution to clarify board policy regarding students’ citizenship status. “Schools should be a protected place and we should offer sanctuary to students and staff who feel they are being threatened,” Baten-Caswell said. “It gives our community direction on what our values are, and reinforces our policies.” The resolution states that teachers and administration should not voluntarily give out any student information to immigration officers and instead send immigration enforcement directly to the superintendent. Although this was an existing
policy in PAUSD, the resoluSuperintendent Dr. Max Mction emphasizes the district’s Gee believes the resolution is commitment to protecting and SANCTUARY—p.4 reassuring immigrant families. “The purpose of the resolution is to set forth a very clear policy that the district will not cooperate with immigration enforcement beyond what we are required to by law,” B oa rd Vice President Ken10.2% of Santa Clara net h Dauber sa id . residents are The board wants to undocumented maintain a safe learning environment for students who are worried about their immigration status. Public Policy Institute of California