Los Angeles school reopens amid sex abuse scandal

By Christina Hoag

Associated Press

Published: Thursday, Feb. 9 2012 8:50 p.m. MST

Teacher Martha Cedeno reads a story to her first grade class at Miramonte Elementary School in Los Angeles after the campus re-opened with all-new slate of teachers and administrators on Thursday, Feb. 9, 2012. The campus was closed for two days by Los Angeles Unified School District to replace the staff after two teachers where charged with lewd acts on students.

Los Angeles Times, Ifran Khan, Pool, Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — School got off to a rough start Thursday with students returning to class for the first time since their entire elementary school staff was replaced after two longtime teachers were accused of lewd acts on children.

The teachers union president assailed the reassignment of teachers as a stunt, about 100 parents and students blasted the move, and some of the new teachers needed a bit of help from their charges.

United Teachers Los Angeles President Warren Fletcher said teachers were being "tarred and stigmatized for no reason" and that grievances would be filed against Los Angeles Unified School District on behalf of some 85 reassigned teachers.

"It is crystal clear that LAUSD doesn't have a plan," Fletcher said. "They're making this up as they go along, and students at the school are paying the price."

The school had been closed for two days while the entire 120-member staff was replaced in an unprecedented move by the district.

Superintendent John Deasy said the makeover was needed to clear the school from a cloud of distrust and suspicion stemming from the arrest of former third-grade teacher Mark Berndt, 61, who has been charged with 23 counts of lewd acts upon children, ages 6 to 10. Berndt is accused of feeding his semen to some students during "tasting games" in his classroom from 2005 to 2010.

A second teacher, Martin Springer, 49, was arrested last week after two girls said he had fondled them in class in 2009. Springer pleaded not guilty after he was charged with committing three lewd acts on one girl in 2009. The other girl has since recanted her allegation.

About 100 parents and children protested with signs saying "Give us our teachers back" and chanting "no new teachers" as TV cameras rolled.

Parents also attended a meeting with the new principal, but many emerged dissatisfied, saying the district went overboard.

"My son liked his teacher," said Jose Vargas, shaking his head.

Deasy said replacing the staff, from janitors to principal, was necessary to restore trust among parents in the largely poor, Latino neighborhood of unincorporated Los Angeles County.

Whether any of the previous staff will return to Miramonte will be determined after the district completes its investigation into how Berndt's alleged activities went undetected for so long, he said.

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