Honors given for fighting violence
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- They have fought the toughest bully of all -- a notion
that nothing bad ever happens in their community.
Now the grass-roots parent activists -- who began the Safe Schools
Partnership in Corona del Mar and set out to abolish the “code of silence
in the schoolyard” that protects bullies -- have support and confirmation
of their cause.
The three parents -- Cyndie Borcoman, Lucy Steinberg and Gwen Haas --
were awarded as Ambassadors of Peace by the Violence Coalition of Orange
County on Friday for their fight against bullying.
“It’s a great validation of what we’ve been doing,” Steinberg said.
“It’s good to know that people agree with us that our kids need to be
safe. This is something we need to keep on with.”
The safe schools crusade began last spring after a 13-year-old boy was
choked by a classmate in a gym class and no students came forward right
away. Following their efforts, the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
Board of Education approved a revision to the district’s zero-tolerance
policy -- which sets guidelines for student conduct -- that added
bullying, intimidation and violence to the list of things that
disciplinarians will crack down on.
“It was a real grass-roots effort that came together with nothing else
in common but that they wanted their children not to be bullied,” said
Daria Waetjen, a coalition committee member who works at the Orange
County Department of Education, one of 80 organizations that make up the
coalition.
The coalition was established in 1996 to promote policies in Orange
County that prevent violence, to change community norms by establishing
nonviolence as desirable behavior and to foster communication among
community members.
“This is the fifth year for the Ambassador of Peace Awards,” Waetjen
said. “The impetus was really to recognize exceptional work and leaders
in the county in the areas that have been laid out.”
While the Safe Schools Partnership won for the category of “agency,”
there were seven others categories. Among the honorees Friday were the
following: for law enforcement, California Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer; for
judiciary, Judge Pam L. Iies of the Harbor Justice Center; and Corona del
Mar High School’s Josh Ludmir won for the youth category.
“These people have done amazing things, and I am flattered and honored
to be counted among them,” said Ludmir, a senior at Corona del Mar High
School who got his award for organizing the school’s first Tolerance Day.
But it was more than pulling together an anti-violence symposium,
Waetjen said.
“It’s not just the Tolerance Day -- he walks the walk,” she said.
The honor left each of the Newport Beach recipients humbled and
honored.
“I really appreciate it because I think we stand for kids who need a
voice, to be heard about their feeling safe at school and their ability
to express themselves,” Borcoman said. “It’s still a battle.”
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