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7 years agoon
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Myles BarkerFresno’s notorious “Hall of Shame” will be transformed into a state-of-the-art alternative education site in southeast Fresno.
Fresno Unified trustees voted unanimously Wednesday night to buy the old juvenile hall campus on Tenth Street, ending months of negotiations with the county of Fresno.
The former juvenile facility’s “Hall of Shame” designation came from award-winning investigative reporting led by Barbara Anderson and George Hostetter of The Fresno Bee in 2001.
A headline on the lead story was “It’s unsafe, decrepit, ‘barbaric.’ A place where children rot. Step inside.”
The Bee’s reporting motivated county leaders to do better for youth and they replaced the Hall of Shame with the Juvenile Justice Campus on east American Avenue near Highway 99.
From his early days riding his bicycle near the juvenile hall, Councilmember Luis Chavez said he always knew it was a place he didn’t want to be in.
“This building was a symbol of punishment, a symbol of crime, a place where you came if you did something bad,” Chavez said. “But now, this place will be a building where young people can come and build their dreams, be inspired and achieve their full potential.”
Instead of producing future parolees or probationers, Chavez said the facility will produce future doctors, lawyers, and business owners.
The Hall of Shame will soon become a “Field of Dreams,” said Sal Quintero, chairman of the Fresno County Board of Supervisors.
“It has been years in the making to take this over and turn it into something that this neighborhood can really be proud of,” Quintero said.
Bullard High area trustee Brooke Ashjian said that the board’s approval of the purchase agreement was a great moment in his life and a great moment for Fresno Unified.
“For me to end my time here in the next 30 days on the Fresno Unified School Board and to be able to vote in support of a place where kids’ dreams came to die to a place where kids’ dreams can come to be set free is a great opportunity for me,” Ashjian said.
The big picture, Chavez said, is not just about building a new education center, it is about building children’s futures and building south Fresno’s future.
“The rebirth of southeast Fresno needs a foundation based on education, and that is exactly what this building will do,” Chavez said.
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Randy Kevorkian
April 5, 2020 at 1:05 am
Working there for over 10 yrs. as Counselor and Juvenile Deputy Probation Officer and a total of 40 plus yrs in Corrections/Law Enforcement this article never covers the horrendous crimes many of the youths committed against society and the opportunities Juvenile Hall and Probation offered at that time. The trial of victims is also not mention.