Francisco Estrada Watsonville
Watsonville City Councilman Francisco "Paco" Estrada talks to the crowd at a Santa Cruz County Office of Education meeting in Watsonville's Civic Plaza in 2020. — Tony Nuñez/The Pajaronian

WATSONVILLE—A gaggle of educators and nonprofit leaders gathered on the uppermost floor of the Watsonville City Plaza Tuesday to hear Santa Cruz County Superintendent of Schools Faris Sabbah outline his department’s operational plan for the next five years.

The two-hour session was both a chance to present the strategic plan, and to illustrate the multifaceted role of the SCCOE.

“We feel that we need to hold ourselves accountable to our community and deliver on our promise, and that’s what the theme of these presentations is about,” Sabbah said.

The strategic plan can be viewed in its entirety at bit.ly/2RIvnQp. 

In it, SCCOE lists three areas – safety, academic achievement and sustainable systems – as its primary areas of focus.

Dulce Vasquez, 11, plays an Orff instrument with El Sistema Santa Cruz during Tuesday night’s Santa Cruz County Office of Education meeting at Watsonville’s Civic Plaza. — Tony Nuñez/The Pajaronian

Safety

The Safety portion is an overarching idea that addresses bullying, economic instability, homelessness, family violence, discrimination, racism, fear of deportation and other forms of trauma.

“We cannot be talking about college and career readiness without talking about wellness, without talking about social-emotional well-being,” Sabbah said. “Without talking about safety.”

Academic achievement/career readiness

“In a community like ours, one of the measures of success is to be able to find a career that sustains one’s family in this community, and that’s a difficult challenge for a lot of us here,” Sabbah said.

Sustainable systems

This portion of the strategic plan calls for all service providers that deal with young people to work together to better provide them equitable services. 

“At the heart of our plan is equity,” Sabbah said. “We are driven by a deep sense of urgency to disrupt inequitable practices and transform educational systems, so that all learners from birth to adulthood, and with diverse and unique backgrounds and circumstances, have opportunities and access to support and resources to enable them to achieve and thrive. We are making a promise to our youth and we will continue to deliver on this promise.”

Previous articleCounty joins lawsuit to halt oil, mineral extraction
Next articleFeds give county homelessness program $3.4M
General assignment reporter, covering nearly every beat. I specialize in feature stories, but equally skilled in hard and spot news. Pajaronian/Good Times/Press Banner reporter honored by CSBA. https://pajaronian.com/r-p-reporter-honored-by-csba/

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here