Nevada
Kids Offered Coping Skills at North Vegas School ‘Zen Den’
By HILLARY DAVIS, Las Vegas Solar
NORTH LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) — On this classroom at Ruby Duncan Elementary Faculty in North Las Vegas there aren’t any desks and few chairs within the spacious space that was a science lab.
There’s a tent fabricated from gauze and adorned with Christmas lights and a big furry pillow for teenagers who want a cuddly contact.
Welcome to the what the varsity affectionately calls its “Zen Den,” a reset room designed to instill wholesome coping mechanisms amongst its youthful college students by therapeutic play, sensory-friendly stimulus and a relaxed place to speak to a relaxed grownup.
Duncan college students are in a position to come to the room to chill down after changing into agitated — or to stop a meltdown — and learn to deal with their feelings.
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The concept is to show youngsters whereas they’re nonetheless younger the right way to course of and refocus their emotions in order that they don’t worsen to violent outbursts, particularly as the children grow old and larger.
A spike this 12 months within the frequency and depth of violence has led Clark County Faculty District officers to debate myriad doable options.
An assault this month on a instructor at a Las Vegas highschool led district officers to announce they may distribute wearable “panic button” units for academics and workers to have the ability to summon assist in an emergency.
Final month, alongside bulletins of expulsion requirements and funneling college entries to a single door, directors talked about rolling out extra reset rooms for elementary colleges.
Duncan Principal Amy Manning instructed the Las Vegas Solar that for the reason that Zen Den began taking in youngsters this 12 months, classroom disruptions like speaking out of flip and pestering classmates have gone down noticeably, and Duncan Elementary’s “exclusionary self-discipline” has gone down about 20%.
Exclusionary self-discipline is any punishment that takes a scholar out of their typical schooling setting, like suspension and expulsion.
Manning stated academics framed the Zen Den as a optimistic, protected house to work on college students’ conduct. She stated Duncan was one among a handful of district elementary campuses to launch on the undertaking.
“We wish to meet our college students the place they’re at, it doesn’t matter what the mindset is that day,” she stated.
If that mindset isn’t good, they’ll’t sit by class and study, she stated, so this house might help them reboot.
Jay Meyers, who has a background in working with youngsters with extreme emotional challenges, is Duncan’s conduct strategist and accountable for the room.
He hosts a “breakfast membership” earlier than college and pullout periods through the day that youngsters earn, as tracked on conduct charts.
The Duncan reset room contains a bin of shredded scrap paper for teenagers who want crisp tactile sensation or to tear up one thing that isn’t worthwhile. Flute music and the lights are each set to low and comfortable.
There are bookshelves coated in paint that turns them into chalkboard surfaces, for teenagers who have to scribble or draw past paper. A toy kitchen for imaginative play. Glow-in-the-dark stars in a dim nook and a tubular, water-filled lamp that quietly churns up bubbles and knocks round colourful plastic fish for teenagers who want one thing to stare upon.
And there are a number of miniature trampolines and a freestanding punching bag with a number of tiny pairs of boxing gloves for teenagers who specific themselves bodily — an urge that may be dangerous, particularly when upset. The punching bag was the primary merchandise Manning stated she purchased for the room.
Reset rooms can be discovered throughout the nation — in and round Indianapolis, Fayetteville, N.C., and Dallas, for instance. The Dallas Impartial Faculty District restricted suspensions this 12 months to solely severe offenses. For minor violations, older youngsters can go to reset rooms on each center and highschool campus.
Manning and Meyers stated their college students had emotional points and private traumas to kind by lengthy earlier than the coronavirus pandemic. Throughout college closures and the pandemic’s distance studying interval, Duncan workers deliberate and outfitted the room.
As a result of the room is so well-known, it’s additionally used as a reward as a result of it’s “the best factor in the entire college,” Meyers stated.
Copyright 2022 The Related Press. All rights reserved. This materials will not be printed, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Nevada
‘Tremendous contributions:’ Southern Nevada’s top health official is retiring
Dr. Fermin Leguen’s family had expected him to become physician since he was a child growing up in Cuba.
He initially thought that he might study aviation technology. He wanted travel the world.
“Honestly, medicine wasn’t one of my top things to do,” he said in a recent interview. “But at the same time — like every other kid — you really have no idea about what any career is about.”
Leguen, 71, eventually made a choice he said he’s never regretted.
“Finally, I decided to go with medicine,” Leguen said.
Southern Nevada’s Health District top official is retiring at the beginning of March, marking an end to a decades-long career that dispatched him across the globe to serve in public health.
“I have never (spent) a long period of time doing nothing, so I don’t know what to expect,” he said about his upcoming retirement.
Leguen — who became the face of the valley’s COVID-19 response as acting chief health officer— said he will miss his team and their dedication.
He will simply miss “just being here.”
Leguen said he believes the Health District will remain in good hands, supported with a “very strong team.”
“We have very professional people here with a lot of skills, highly trained,” he said. “Regardless of who’s leading the organization, the biggest strength we have is the people we have here. And they are fully capable of responding to multiple public-health threats that we could face.”
The Health District board appointed Dr. Cassius Lockett — deputy district health officer — to succeed Leguen.
‘Tremendous contributions’
Leguen, who speaks softly and has a shy demeanor, was honored at Las Vegas City Hall earlier this month.
Shortly after the room cleared from the festivities that welcomed new Mayor Shelley Berkley and Councilwoman Shondra Summers-Armstrong, Councilwoman Olivia Diaz took the microphone to issue a proclamation honoring Leguen for his “tremendous contributions.”
“Dr. Leguen, gracias,” Diaz said. “I just want to say ‘thank you’ for everything that you have done.”
Leguen joined the health district in 2016 as director of clinical services. In October 2019 — a few months before the global pandemic broke out, he was named acting chief health officer.
“Little did we know when we selected him… what we were going to be reeling and dealing with as the world and as a community,” Diaz said. “I don’t think this man would get a shut eye.”
As the health district searched for a permanent agency head, “the board leadership just decided Dr. Leguen has already proven himself as the right leader for this agency.”
Leguen was officially promoted in early 2021.
During his tenure, he spearheaded the opening of two community health hubs that offer immunizations and primary health services for patients with no health insurance, Diaz noted.
He said he’s proud of his administration’s program that helps address a congenital syphilis crisis that’s “devastating” children.
During the pandemic, Leguen led the rollout of a bilingual education campaign for Spanish speakers at a time when Latinos accounted for 25 percent of COVID-19 deaths, Diaz said.
When Clark County commissioners faced backlash in the fall of 2021 over a resolution declaring vaccine misinformation a source of increased demand for unsafe treatments, Leguen supported the motion.
“While it is essential for public agencies to provide a forum for people to comment and give input on issues that impact them, it is critical that information impacting the health and safety of the public be based on proven science and accurate data,” he said at the time.
“He’s made it a priority for the Southern Nevada Health District to reflect the community it serves,” Diaz said. “And to forge partnerships with diverse community organizations in order to better reach and serve underserved residents.”
Diaz said Leguen headed the region’s response to other public health emergencies, such as the opioid epidemic and the West Nile virus.
“I wish COVID was the only one,” Diaz said.
A life of service
Leguen was born in Guantanamo, Cuba. His parents moved the family to the capital city of Havana when he was a toddler.
He studied medicine at the University of Havana.
Leguen worked for Cuba’s social services. He fled the communist country in 1991, eventually migrating to the U.S. where he began a residency in Puerto Rico before completing a pediatric residency at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Throughout his career, he was a vaccination consultant in Africa, Caribbean countries and South America.
He credits vaccinations for saving lives during the pandemic.
“When you’re seeing the number of deaths increasing day by day and there is nothing telling you that this is going to get better, it’s very, very depressing,” he said.
While nobody can fully prepare for a future pandemic, Leguen said that the agency has learned lessons to hamper the impact. Community in Southern Nevada collaboration was crucial, he added.
“We must be ready to learn every single day,” he said. “Nobody has the 100 percent answer for anything. We must be willing to communicate with our peers and the public our concerns, our limitations. And also make sure our community is aware of the multiple threats that could be there.”
Leguen, who has a wife and a daughter, said he’s looking forward to having more time to read fiction and watch Korean movies.
Asked to reflect about being an immigrant of color in the U.S. with a life of service under his sleeve, Leguen spoke generally about living out a dream.
“What I would say to anybody is that you have to follow your dreams,” he said. “You must be consistent with your beliefs. You must be able to sacrifice yourselves and be confident.”
Contact Ricardo Torres-Cortez at rtorres@reviewjournal.com.
Nevada
Chabad of Southern Nevada to host Grand Menorah lighting in Downtown Las Vegas
LAS VEGAS (KTNV) — On Thursday, the Chabad of Southern Nevada will host the Grand Menorah lighting at Fremont Street at The Fremont Street Experience at 4 p.m.
Mayor-elect Shelly Berkley and other local officials will be in attendance.
There will be music, latkes and free dreidels for the kids.
The 20-foot menorah is erected and maintained throughout Chanukah from Dec. 25 and culminates on Jan 2.
For more information, you can click here.
Nevada
Driver’s close call near Emerald Bay highlights danger on icy Sierra Nevada roads
TRUCKEE — With another weather system just about done with Northern California, roads in the Northern California high country are open but still potentially treacherous on Christmas Day.
As of noon, there are no restrictions on both Interstate 80 and Highway 50 in the Sierra Nevada.
The same can’t be said for the smaller highways, however.
On Highway 89, Caltrans says chains or snow tires are required from Truckee to the Sierra/Plumas County line, and from Truckee to around 11 miles north of Truckee.
Highlighting how dangerous the conditions could be, on Christmas morning California Highway Patrol posted about a driver who nearly went completely off the side of the road near Emerald Bay. The vehicle had to be towed out.
Further south, along Highway 88, Caltrans says chains are also still required on all vehicles from 6.5 miles east of Peddler Hill in Amador County to about 5 miles west of Picketts Junction in Alpine County.
Another impactful weather system is expected to arrive by Thursday in Northern California
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