O.C. Schools Safer Than State Norm, Crime Tally Shows
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Orange County schools were safer than the state’s campuses overall, according to crime statistics released Wednesday by the state Department of Education.
In the third annual California Safe Schools Assessment, a survey of crime reported by school districts statewide, Orange County districts together posted a lower crime rate than the statewide average in every category.
However, Orange County campuses reported 19% more crimes in the 1997-98 academic year than in the year before, compared to a scant 1% increase statewide. State and local officials said the rise is probably linked to better reporting, rather than actual increases in crime.
Property crimes, which include vandalism, theft, burglary, graffiti and arson, topped all categories with 3.56 incidents per 1,000 students in Orange County, up from 2.91 in 1996-97. Statewide, the rate was 4.48.
Drug and alcohol-related crimes amounted to 1.99 incidents per 1,000 students in Orange County schools, compared with a 3.56 rate statewide.
Battery, which some school officials said can mean anything from a bloody fight to a playground skirmish, was the third highest type of crime reported. The Orange County rate was 1.42 incidents per 1,000 students last year, compared with 3.0 statewide and 0.88 in Orange County the year before.
Crimes involving weapons possession rose slightly in Orange County last year to a rate of 0.67, up from 0.63 the year before.
Elsewhere, three California students died on campuses last year, the data show--in the Berkeley Unified, Merced Union High School and Norwalk-La Mirada Unified districts. Other statewide trends show that fewer guns but more knives were confiscated in public schools last year.
Despite Orange County’s low crime levels, some districts did report rates that topped statewide numbers or showed a marked increase over prior reports.
Capistrano Unified reported 3.26 incidents of drug and alcohol offenses per 1,000 students last year, up from a rate of 2.46 in 1995-96 and 1.65 in the following year.
Julie Jennings, a spokesman for the district, blamed the higher number of incidents on the district’s zero-tolerance policy, implemented in October 1997. The policy requires suspension, transfer or expulsion for students who possess, sell, or are under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
In Laguna Beach, rates of drug and alcohol offenses, battery and property crimes were higher than those reported statewide.
District officials said the discrepancy highlights what they see as a shortcoming of the report: that self-reporting can make for inaccurate comparisons among districts.
“We can’t be certain if we’re all exactly doing this in the same fashion,” said Patricia Koch, an assistant superintendent at Huntington Beach Union High School District. “In any kind of activity like this, with thousands of people involved, there are going to be gradations.”
State officials said there is a uniform method to report school crime. If local administrators are unclear how or whether to report an incident, they can call the state’s toll-free number for an immediate answer, said Jean Scott, a state education department consultant. Her office also distributes a quarterly newsletter and has regional training sessions for educators twice a year that discuss school crime reporting.
“If people are tapping into any of these, then they know there is a pretty consistent method that is being used by all districts across the state,” Scott said.
(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)
O.C. School Crime a Mixed Picture
Orange County schools not only reported far fewer crimes than those in surrounding counties, but the rate per thousand students enrolled was much lower as well.
*--*
County Total crimes Rate/1,000 Los Angeles 17,797 11.2 Orange 3,619 7.9 Riverside 4,834 16.9 San Bernardino 4,987 14.0 San Diego 5,611 12.2 Statewide 74,504 13.0
*--*
Most of the crimes Orange County crimes reported in school year 1997/98 were committed against property. However, total crimes reported increased 19% from 1996/97, led by a huge increase in those against people. The overall crime rate per thousand enrollment jumped from 6.9 to 7.9.
1997-98 Crimes
Property: 45%
Drugs/alcohol: 25%
Person: 21%
Weapons possession: 9%
Change from 1996/97
Person: +49%
Property: +26%
Weapons: +9%
Drugs/alcohol: -4%
*
1997-98 Crime by District
Anaheim Elementary
Person crimes: 124
Property crimes: 24
Drugs/alcohol: 1
Weapons: 42
Total: 191
Rate: 9.5
Anaheim Union High
Person crimes: 27
Property crimes: 61
Drugs/alcohol: 105
Weapons: 31
Total: 224
Rate: 8.4
Brea-Olinda Unified
Person crimes: 7
Property crimes: 38
Drugs/alcohol: 3
Weapons: 0
Total: 48
Rate: 8.0
Buena Park Elementary
Person crimes: 10
Property crimes: 3
Drugs/alcohol: 4
Weapons: 7
Total: 24
Rate: 4.4
Capistrano Unified
Person crimes: 92
Property crimes: 200
Drugs/alcohol: 131
Weapons: 33
Total: 456
Rate: 11.3
Centralia Elementary
Person crimes: 1
Property crimes: 20
Drugs/alcohol: 0
Weapons: 0
Total:21
Rate: 4.1
Cypress Elementary
Person crimes: 0
Property crimes: 6
Drugs/alcohol: 0
Weapons: 1
Total: 7
Rate: 1.5
Fountain Valley Elementary
Person crimes: 3
Property crimes: 15
Drugs/alcohol: 0
Weapons: 1
Total: 19
Rate: 3.1
Fullerton Elementary
Person crimes: 3
Property crimes: 56
Drugs/alcohol: 2
Weapons: 4
Total: 65
Rate: 5.3
Fullerton Joint Union High
Person crimes: 14
Property crimes: 17
Drugs/alcohol: 90
Weapons: 8
Total: 129
Rate: 9.1
Garden Grove Unified
Person crimes: 41
Property crimes: 139
Drugs/alcohol: 58
Weapons: 22
Total: 260
Rate: 5.7
Huntington Beach City Elementary
Person crimes: 37
Property crimes: 8
Drugs/alcohol: 3
Weapons: 3
Total: 51
Rate: 8.0
Huntington Beach Union High
Person crimes: 62
Property crimes: 148
Drugs/alcohol: 124
Weapons: 26
Total: 360
Rate: 25.9
Irvine Unified
Person crimes: 37
Property crimes: 75
Drugs/alcohol: 44
Weapons: 12
Total: 168
Rate: 7.3
La Habra City Elementary
Person crimes: 1
Property crimes: 18
Drugs/alcohol: 6
Weapons: 2
Total: 27
Rate: 4.6
Laguna Beach Unified
Person crimes: 13
Property crimes: 12
Drugs/alcohol: 10
Weapons: 0
Total: 35
Rate: 13.7
Los Alamitos Unified
Person crimes: 2
Property crimes: 24
Drugs/alcohol: 18
Weapons: 3
Total: 47
Rate: 5.5
Magnolia Elementary
Person crimes: 2
Property crimes: 28
Drugs/alcohol: 1
Weapons: 2
Total: 33
Rate: 5.4
SH Newport-Mesa Unified
Person crimes: 17
Property crimes: 101
Drugs/alcohol: 22
Weapons: 7
Total: 147
Rate: 7.3
Ocean View Elementary
Person crimes: 25
Property crimes: 41
Drugs/alcohol: 3
Weapons: 3
Total: 72
Rate: 7.4
Orange County Office of Education
Person crimes: 21
Property crimes: 21
Drugs/alcohol: 1
Weapons: 0
Total: 43
Rate: 6.0
Orange Unified
Person crimes: 29
Property crimes: 40
Drugs/alcohol: 64
Weapons: 13
Total: 146
Rate: 5.0
Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified
Person crimes: 81
Property crimes: 66
Drugs/alcohol: 38
Weapons: 16
Total: 201
Rate: 8.1
Saddleback Valley Unified
Person crimes: 15
Property crimes: 45
Drugs/alcohol: 71
Weapons: 18
Total: 149
Rate: 4.5
Santa Ana Unified
Person crimes: 30
Property crimes: 356
Drugs/alcohol: 65
Weapons: 35
Total: 486
Rate: 9.0
Savanna Elementary
Person crimes: 0
Property crimes: 5
Drugs/alcohol: 0
Weapons: 0
Total: 5
Rate: 2.1
Tustin Unified
Person crimes: 19
Property crimes: 43
Drugs/alcohol: 48
Weapons: 12
Total: 122
Rate: 8.0
SH Westminster Elementary
Person crimes: 57
Property crimes: 20
Drugs/alcohol: 2
Weapons: 4
Total: 83
Rate: 8.8
Notes
* Person crimes include battery, assault with a deadly weapon, robbery/extortion, sex offenses and homicide (three statewide, none in Orange County)
* Property crimes include vandalism, arson, burglary, theft and graffiti
* Bomb threats, destructive/explosive devices and loitering/trespassing not included
Source: California Department of Education
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