HIGH SCHOOLS

Complaint filed against Hart school district

Dept. of Education investigating alleged Title IX discrimination at Saugus, Hart and Canyon highs.

The Office for Civil Rights from the U.S. Department of Education has begun an investigation of the William S. Hart Union High District following a complaint by a parent alleging that the district is discriminating against students on the basis of sex and disability within its sports programs.

The complaint, filed in December and obtained by The Times, alleges that the district has failed to provide “benefits, opportunities and services to female athletes that are equivalent to those provided to male athletes” at Saugus, Newhall Hart and Canyon Country Canyon in regards to softball facilities and locker rooms while also alleging that Saugus’ softball field is inaccessible to students with disabilities.

The complaint alleges that “softball fields are inferior to boys’ facilities,” with money spent by the district for improvement focused on boys’ facilities, such as upgrades for the football fields at Canyon, Hart, Saugus and Valencia.

Saugus hasn’t been able to use its softball field for three years because of a school modernization project and only recently began to make repairs to its existing facility. Hart has been playing its games at an off-campus park because there is no on-campus facility. Canyon’s softball field is shared with freshman football players. Meanwhile, each schools’ baseball fields are considered high-quality facilities.

Principals for the three schools met three weeks ago to discuss a response. The district had until last week to respond to the complaint.

Saugus Principal Bill Bolde said Monday the school has begun extensive work on its softball field, adding new bleachers, a new backstop, a new outfield fence, a new scoreboard, refurbished dugouts and changed a dirt trail to asphalt to help with access for people in wheelchairs.

But Jim Torp, a Saugus parent who did not file the complaint but has a son with cerebral palsy, said the asphalt trail has no handrails, is too steep and remains unsafe for wheelchairs.

The Region IX Office for Civil Rights based in San Francisco is handling the complaint and has the authority to request appropriate action take place if noncompliance is found.

The Office for Civil Rights is responsible for enforcing sections of Title II of the Americans and Disabilities Act of 1990 over complaints alleging discrimination on the basis of disability and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in education programs and activities.

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