District won’t seek another bond measure -- at least not yet
- Share via
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The Huntington Beach Union High School District will
seek almost $60 million in modernization funds from the state as an
alternative to its failed Nov. 9 bond election, district officials said
last week.
The board of trustees approved a district staff plan to seek $59.1
million from the state to help cover the expense of repairing its high
schools, some of which have sinking buildings, leaky roofs and poor
plumbing.
Assistant Supt. Patricia Koch outlined the plan during a special session
last Thursday.
“The state money will not make our schools what they ought to be,” Koch
said.
Consultants have estimated the district needs $160 million to bring its
campuses up to date. But Measure A, which was turned down by voters last
month, could have brought the district $137 million from local property
owners and an additional $37 million in state matching funds, but the
measure failed.
Board members concluded their best bet now is to seek state matching
funds from Proposition 1A.
Under Proposition 1A, districts in need must put up 20% of the funds it
needs to repair its facilities. The state then provides the remaining
80%.
State officials have estimated the high school district needs about $37
million for its most basic repairs. But with the failure of Measure A,
the district is now entitled to almost $19 million more in “hardship”
funds.
“If a district has an unsuccessful bond election, that makes them a
welfare district,” Supt. Susan Roper said. “The state then lowers the
amount the district has to provide for matching funds and will increase
its part of modernization money.”
Roper said the district could receive $13 million in “facility hardship”
funds to repair Fountain Valley High School, which has one building
that’s sinking into a bog. The district is also eligible for $5.6 million
in financial hardship funds.
State officials have said the money could be available in July.
“We are working on the applications right now,” Roper said.
However, the $60 million is not guaranteed, Roper said. The mounds of
paperwork that district staff is now laboring over must be approved by
state authorities before the money can be given to the district.
As for the district’s 20%, Roper said that $2.9 million “will take up all
our available resources.”
She said the district will use developers fees and facilities lease fees
to help fund the match.
Roper said she hopes work can begin next summer.
But state matching funds are not the district’s only option.
In March, the voters will decide on Proposition 26, which if passed will
lower the threshold on school repair bond elections. School bonds now
need a two-thirds majority to pass. Proposition 26 would lower that to a
simple majority.
“If Proposition 26 passes, the odds are quite high that we would do
another bond election,” Roper said.
In the Nov. 9 election, about 61% of voters said yes to the bond.
But as the district weighs its options for a future bond election, some
in the community have questions about the last bond campaign, which is
undergoing a district attorney’s office investigation for alleged
election violations, said Assistant Dist. Atty. Carolyn Carlisle-Rains.
Carlisle-Rains would not comment on the investigation, except to say that
it was ongoing.
Documents show that the Repair Our Neighborhood Schools campaign, which
lobbied for the November bond, received thousands of dollars from
architects who stood to benefit financially from a successful election.
KPI Architects, which produced some of the plans for the district’s
modernization project, contributed $25,000 to the bond campaign.
KPI President David Kindred said the failure of the bond election cut
back the amount of work his firm would do for the district, depriving it
of business.
Y’Deen Associates architectural firm donated $9,000 to the campaign.
David Y’Deen said his firm would have benefited financially if the bond
election had passed.
“Some of our projects are on hold because of the failed bond election,”
Y’Deen said.
Officials at the Fair Political Practices Commission said it is not
uncommon for contractors to help fund school repair bond campaigns to
increase their business.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.