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STHS beefing up security


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By Kathryn Reed

Skid marks remain at South Tahoe High School where a truck at 1:30 one morning last week did a few doughnuts in the circular entryway.

Cameras captured a truck, believed to be a black Ford, 2008 era, with wide wheels. Enhanced equipment will soon be installed to make sure the next person who vandalizes school property can be definitively identified.

The skid marks will be cleaned up and Aspen Hollow will replace the damaged landscaping. It may not be done by Thursday’s open house.

School officials are not happy with skid marks at STHS. Photos/Kathryn Reed

School officials are not happy with skid marks at STHS. Photos/Kathryn Reed

Much of the short Lake Tahoe Unified School District meeting on Aug. 24 pertained to surveillance equipment. The board unanimously agreed to spend $15,483 on the Career Technical Education building and $23,338 on the Overcrowded Relief Grant classroom wings. The equipment is being bought with Measure G money.

Measure G is the $64.5 million facilities bond voters approved in 2008. Another $30 million has been secured in matching grants from the state.

With millions being spent at the high school, officials want to secure the entire facility. A perimeter fence is not being talked about, but it’s likely a gate on Viking Way will be installed. Already speed bumps have been put in to slow traffic.

“We will do it tastefully,” Superintendent Jim Tarwater told the board.

Motion sensors are going into classrooms.

“If someone breaks in, we’ll know about it,” Steve Morales, facilities director, said.

New gates would look better than the 13th Street entrance to STHS.

New gates would look better than the 13th Street entrance to STHS.

At the two-story Stadium View building every teacher has a unique code to gain access to the building and then their classroom. This is an added layer of security in such a large building so staff does not have to worry about someone being in the building who shouldn’t be.

Board member Sue Novasel expressed concern staff may give out the code to students. She pointed out how when her kids were at STHS they ended up with keys to the school.

Morales explained that a record is kept of who enters when so it will be easy to know whose card is being used when.

The other idea brought up to better secure the campus is to have cantilever gates installed between buildings. They would be open during school hours and closed off all other times.

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Comments (4)
  1. doubleblack says - Posted: August 25, 2010

    Just gives us more money, more money, more money, more money and we will educate. Unless we don’t educate, then please give us more money, more money, more money. You are pathetic and dim.

  2. Me Again says - Posted: August 25, 2010

    Doubleblack you seem to be the pathetic one here, the STHS looks great and will better serve our kids why not keep it secure too, do you own a black Ford doubleblack.

  3. Lisa Huard says - Posted: August 25, 2010

    It’s sad that the school district is now having to talk about fences. One of the things I loved about Tahoe when I first moved here is that there weren’t any, anywhere. Now they’re on our homes and worst of all, perhaps our schools. If people were more respectful the district wouldn’t have to spend the money or the time. If people were more respectful and more involved with our kids, then schools could do what they intended to do in the first place; teach. Perhaps more of us should become involved in solutions so they can do that.

  4. PerryRObray says - Posted: August 25, 2010

    I’ve seen nice houses with wired in security that supposedly they didn’t even lock the doors. Maybe if they are lucky the cameras, ect… will work and they won’t need the gates.