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California elementary school in crisis mode as kids forced to learn in most toxic rooms imaginable

california-elementary-school-in-crisis-mode-as-kids-forced-to-learn-in-most-toxic-rooms-imaginable
California elementary school in crisis mode as kids forced to learn in most toxic rooms imaginable

Parents at a San Diego-area elementary school are growing frustrated with pests and mold infesting their children’s classrooms, as fears grow for their safety without learning.

Nine teachers have reported rodents, mold, mildew and cockroaches at Fuerte Elementary in the Cajon Valley Union School District, according to independent journalist Amy Reichart. It’s gotten so bad that some parents have pulled their children from school.

Aerial view of Cajon Valley Middle School, showing classrooms, parking lots, and play areas, surrounded by residential buildings and hills.

Fuerte Elementary at El Cajon Valley School District FACILITRON

Mold growth and water stains on a ceiling tile.

Picture of mold at the school. Change Org

A petition was recently launched to demand transparency from the school district on facility maintenance and campus conditions. More than 270 people have signed on as of Wednesday.

Issues of water intrusion and pest activity have been plaguing classrooms over the past school year, the petition read. The incoming summer break for students is a ripe chance to address those issues forcefully.

“While some concerns may already be under review, many families would appreciate greater transparency regarding assessments, planned repairs, and long-term facility improvements,” the petition read.

“We entrusted our children into this environment, are we going to allow it to slide?”

The petition creator, who was not identified, shared a photo of black mold growing on the wall or ceiling of a classroom that she said her child spent a year in. The Post reached out to the organizer.

Headshot of a man in a gray suit and red tie, smiling at the camera with a blurred green background.

Anthony Carnevale

Anthony Carnevale, a school board member, responded to the petition and said the school’s septic issues are set to be repaired this summer while another school just had their issues fixed last year.

However, he acknowledged the need for urgent action.

“It shouldn’t have gotten to the point where kids and school employees are exposed to these conditions, but sometimes local government needs to be reminded who they serve and whose money they’re spending,” he said.

“Resist bureaucratic gaslighting. Water intrusion and pest issues are serious health and safety problems that require real remediation and repair.”

Maintenance requests and documentation of issues should be sent to the superintendent, he added, promising to get those shared with the whole school board. Carnevale also said he will ask to publicly share a plan to get schools back into shape.

“There’s no excuse for failure here,” he said.

The California Post reached out to the school district for comment.


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