EDITORIAL
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The threat is ever-present on school campuses: “This will go on your
permanent record.” You hear it in elementary school, are saddled with it
in middle school, and then it becomes the ultimate menace in high school,
when there’s indication that a mark on your permanent record will be
enough to keep you out of college.
At some point, of course, when you reach adulthood and school is a bit
behind you, you’re able to reflect on the fear that threat created and
realize that, really, there never was a permanent record to cause such
years-long concern.
Or is there?
It turns out that longtime Newport Harbor High School cheerleading
coach Lisa Callahan has been sacked, and all thanks to her permanent
record, it seems. Callahan, by telling school administrators in November
that she had seen irregularities in the judging of cheerleader tryouts,
sparked the controversy about who should be on the squad and whether
Newport Harbor handled the situation well by first allowing everyone who
tried out to join the team and then reversing that decision.
The emotion from that roller coaster, by most accounts, was settling
down when news hit late last month of Callahan’s dismissal. It is rightly
welling back up for two reasons: the timing of and reason for her
removal.
In the first place, even if there is no direct correlation between
Callahan’s firing and the controversy, it clearly is going to arouse
suspicion that she was forced out because of her role in this sorry
affair. Was that not obvious? Add to that the cause for her dismissal --
school officials say her hiring process and background screening were not
done properly 13 years ago -- was essentially an ancient technicality,
and there appears the same fumbling of events that has let this
controversy turn into the “cheerleader crisis.”
And that leads to the inevitable question: Why?
Why has a routine matter, albeit important to some, spiraled out of
control? Why was a firm decision not made at the very beginning of this
mess that the school and district could then follow?
The answer rests somewhere in district headquarters or the Newport
Harbor administration. Someone really should explain it, and do so
quickly, before the district and the school’s permanent records gets a
mark for a very minor incident.
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