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Private Armenian School Wins Suit In Glendale

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  • Private Armenian School Wins Suit In Glendale

    PRIVATE ARMENIAN SCHOOL WINS SUIT IN GLENDALE

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    July 26, 2012 - 17:17 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - A private Armenian school was improperly shut down
    by Glendale officials, some of whom gave false testimony about events
    that led to the closure of the campus in 2010, a Los Angeles County
    Superior Court judge has ruled, according to Glendale News-Press.

    In the ruling handed down last week, Judge David Milton found that city
    officials used "increased fees, yellow tagging and other steps" as a
    "pretext to achieve an unlawful purpose, closing plaintiff's school."

    Milton awarded that school, Scholars Academic Foundation, $135,000
    in damages.

    City Atty. Mike Garcia said by phone Wednesday, July 25, that he
    vehemently disagrees with Milton's decision, but city officials have
    yet to decide whether to appeal.

    "We were pretty shocked by some of these conclusions," Garcia said.

    The debacle began when Scholars Academic Foundation moved from its
    location at 1021 Grandview Ave. to a former Glendale Unified School
    District building at 3800 Foothill Blvd. in January 2010 without
    proper city permits.

    The school's principal, Anahit Grigoryan, said during court proceedings
    that the city's former zoning administrator, Edith Fuentes, said they
    could operate in the new building if they quickly applied for permits.

    That turned out to be an incorrect assessment.

    The city sent the kindergarten-to-12th-grade school violation notices
    but never received a response. In a surprise February 2010 visit,
    a fire inspector determined the building was unsafe to occupy as
    a school.

    But Milton said the inspector's decision to yellow-tag the building
    - making it temporarily uninhabitable - was "not supported by the
    evidence."

    The inspector, Jeffrey Halpert, said the City Council ordered the
    city attorney to "go after the school," according to Milton's ruling.

    "It's just not true," Garcia said, contending that Halpert's statement
    was based on hearsay.

    Mayor Frank Quintero also said Wednesday that the City Council did
    not give those marching orders, but officials take children's safety
    seriously.

    "When it comes to children's safety, it's always important that things
    get done properly, and that's the bottom line," he said.

    In court documents, city officials said the school had an inadequate
    fire alarm and locked or blocked exits, prompting the shutdown.

    Ron Billing, a city building inspector, testified that the exits were
    blocked by chairs stacked in a hallway. Additionally, he said, the fire
    alarm system needed replacement batteries. In an earlier declaration
    used to support the temporary restraining order that resulted in the
    school's closure, he said the problems were more severe, claiming,
    in part, that there was no fire system at all.

    Billing, who has been in Glendale for 10 years, "did not display the
    level of knowledge, expertise, objectivity or veracity expected from
    a government official," Milton wrote, noting Billing acknowledged
    that the 2010 declaration was partially false.

    The judge added that some witnesses, including Fuentes, were "not
    candid during all court proceedings due to fear of retaliation"
    by the city.

    The school moved to several other locations after being shut down. It
    is now operating in Los Angeles, although it has lost all but roughly
    25 of its original 300 students.

    "Our client was fully and completely vindicated," said Richard Foster,
    the school's attorney. "As demonstrated by the decision, the city's
    misconduct was outrageous, dishonest and prevalent, reaching to the
    highest levels."

    Foster added that the school plans to ask a judge to require the city
    to pay its attorney's fees.

    A financial analyst testified that over 10 years, the school could
    have made $2.75 million. Milton divided that to cover the first six
    months after the building was yellow-tagged.

    Garcia disagreed with the monetary damages, adding that the city's
    decisions did not constitute a "taking" of property because they did
    not deprive the owners of economically viable use of their property.

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