School officials bugged by assignment fallout
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH -- Several Newport Harbor High School students confess they
have spent the past months hunting bugs in the protected Back Bay area,
but also admit they were told not to do it.
“I know a lot of people have gone to the Back Bay -- maybe half [of the
students collecting] have gone there, looked and tried to collect,” said
Natalie Citro, a freshman who admits to snagging a few herself.
Citro is one of hundreds of students at Newport Harbor who at the
beginning of the school year was given the task of collecting 50
different insects to be studied and labeled.
And despite teachers’ warnings, Upper Newport Bay Regional Park officials
say students nabbed a portion of their catch within the protected park.
“Almost every year there are students out here collecting,” said Nancy
Bruland, a park ranger with Orange County. “Basically, you can not
collect on park property -- so it’s against the law.”
Barbara Barry, a biology teacher at Newport Harbor, insists that all 10
teachers make a point of telling students to stay out of all ecological
reserves -- and have done so over the 30 years the project has been in
place.
During that time, the bug collection project has become something of a
tradition at Newport Harbor, said Principal Bob Boies.
“This whole ecological thing was blown out of proportion,” he said. “A
small minority do go where they’re not supposed to, but the kids tell me
there aren’t even very good bugs there.”
Sophomore bug collector Jennifer Miller backs up Boies’ assessment. She
said she knows of a couple students who went there but found only
dragonflies, which are easy to catch on the school’s soccer field.
Miller said she enjoyed the project, which helped her overcome her fear
of insects.
“It’s also like a high school milestone,” she added. “You know you have
to do it.”
Biology teachers at Newport Harbor couldn’t believe the uproar.
“I don’t understand what the conflict is,” said Don Johnston, a biology
and marine science instructor at Newport Harbor. “We do not condone
students going in restricted areas.”
Not only do teachers warn students there will be consequences if they are
caught in restricted areas, Johnston said, but a couple years back,
students who were caught had to pay a steep fine.
Johnston said every year the school gets a few calls from both the Back
Bay and residents, complaining about students tromping through gardens.
“But what it comes down to is, you can’t control them,” he said. “A few
bad kids are reflecting on good kids.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.