Spanish at school translates to suspension
Controversy caused by Kansas City incident reflects national debate
By T.R. Reid
The Washington Post
Updated: 6:36 a.m. ET Dec. 9, 2005
KANSAS CITY, Kan. - Most of the time, 16-year-old Zach Rubio converses
in clear, unaccented American teen-speak, a form of English in which
the three most common words are "like," "whatever" and "totally." But
Zach is also fluent in his dad's native language, Spanish -- and that's
what got him suspended from school.
"It was, like, totally not in the classroom," the high school junior
said, recalling the infraction. "We were in the, like, hall or
whatever, on restroom break. This kid I know, he's like, 'Me prestas un
dolar?' ['Will you lend me a dollar?'] Well, he asked in Spanish; it
just seemed natural to answer that way. So I'm like, 'No problema.' "
But that conversation turned out to be a big problem for the staff at
the Endeavor Alternative School, a small public high school in an
ethnically mixed blue-collar neighborhood. A teacher who overheard the
two boys sent Zach to the office, where Principal Jennifer Watts
ordered him to call his father and leave the school.
Watts, whom students describe as a disciplinarian, said she can't
discuss the case. But in a written "discipline referral" explaining her
decision to suspend Zach for 1 1/2 days, she noted: "This is not the
first time we have [asked] Zach and others to not speak Spanish at
school."
Since then, the suspension of Zach Rubio has become the talk of the
town in both English and Spanish newspapers and radio shows. The school
district has officially rescinded his punishment and said that speaking
a foreign language is not grounds for suspension. Meanwhile, the Rubio
family has retained a lawyer, who says a civil rights lawsuit may be in
the offing.
National debate
The tension here surrounding that brief exchange in a high school hall
reflects a broader national debate over the language Americans should
speak amid a wave of Hispanic immigration.
The National Council of La Raza, a Hispanic advocacy group, says that
20 percent of the U.S. school-age population is Latino. For half of
those Latino students, the native language is Spanish.
Conflicts are bursting out nationwide over bilingual education,
"English-only" laws, Spanish-language publications and advertising, and
other linguistic collisions. Language concerns have been a key aspect
of the growing political movement to reduce immigration.
"There's a lot of backlash against the increasing Hispanic population,"
said D.C. school board member Victor A. Reinoso. "We've seen some of it
in the D.C. schools. You see it in some cities, where people complain
that their tax money shouldn't be used to print public notices in
Spanish. And there have been cases where schools want to ban foreign
languages."
Some advocates of an English-only policy in U.S. schools say that it is
particularly important for students from immigrant families to use the
nation's dominant language.
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) made that point this summer
when he vetoed a bill authorizing various academic subjects to be
tested in Spanish in the state's public schools. "As an immigrant," the
Austrian-born governor said, "I know the importance of mastering
English as quickly and as comprehensively as possible."
Hispanic groups generally agree with that, but they emphasize the value
of a multilingual citizenry. "A fully bilingual young man like Zach
Rubio should be considered an asset to the community," said Janet
Murguia, national president of La Raza.
The influx of immigrants has reached every corner of the country --
even here in Kansas City, which is about as far as a U.S. town can be
from a border. Along Southwest Boulevard, a main street through some of
the older neighborhoods, there are blocks where almost every shop and
restaurant has signs written in Spanish.
"Most people, they don't care where you're from," said Zach's father,
Lorenzo Rubio, a native of Veracruz, Mexico, who has lived in Kansas
City for a quarter-century. "But sometimes, when they hear my accent, I
get this, sort of, 'Why don't you go back home?' "
Rubio, a U.S. citizen, credits U.S. immigration law for his decision to fight his son's suspension.
"You can't just walk in and become a citizen," he said. "They make you
take this government test. I studied for that test, and I learned that
in America, they can't punish you unless you violate a written policy."
Rubio said he remembered that lesson on Nov. 28, when he received a
call from Endeavor Alternative saying his son had been suspended.
"So I went to the principal and said, 'My son, he's not suspended for
fighting, right? He's not suspended for disrespecting anyone. He's
suspended for speaking Spanish in the hall?' So I asked her to show me
the written policy about that. But they didn't have" one.
Rubio then called the superintendent of the Turner Unified School
District, which operates the school. The district immediately rescinded
Zach's suspension, local media reported. The superintendent did not
respond to several requests to comment for this article.
Since then, the issue of speaking Spanish in the hall has not been
raised at the school, Zach said. "I know it would be, like, disruptive
if I answered in Spanish in the classroom. I totally don't do that. But
outside of class now, the teachers are like, 'Whatever.' "
For Zach's father, and for the Hispanic organizations that have
expressed concern, the suspension is not a closed case. "Obviously
they've violated his civil rights," said Chuck Chionuma, a lawyer in
Kansas City, Mo., who is representing the Rubio family. "We're studying
what form of legal redress will correct the situation."
Said Rubio: "I'm mainly doing this for other Mexican families, where
the legal status is kind of shaky and they are afraid to speak up.
Punished for speaking Spanish? Somebody has to stand up and say: This
is wrong."
Wow... people are so dumb, sometimes...okay, all the time! I just don't understand...