FEEDBACK
Steve Smith calls for a leader such as Jim de Boom for the Newport-Mesa
school board (“Leaders are to blame for crumbling schools,” Jan. 8). Jim
de Boom served on the board for several years before and after the
bankruptcy of Orange County. He was also the executive director of the
local YMCA during the time the “expansion” plan was started and later
abandoned.
Yes, serious mistakes were made by past boards, but it will be the
students who will suffer for years to come if the school bond measure is
not passed.
HELEN DINKINS
Newport Beach
Steve Smith’s most recent column regarding the proposed school bond is
right on target when he states that school administration and the board
are at fault for the sorry state of our facilities. It’s poor business
management, pure and simple.
Obviously these repairs should have been budgeted long ago. Districts
must plan and set aside money for construction and maintenance of
schools. What happened? It has been made amply clear to many of us that
giving them more money won’t solve their self-induced problems and,
therefore, residents should not be duped by this current district public
relations campaign.
Newport-Mesa has a long history of scandal, mismanagement and
misadventure.
Remember the district embezzlement, the borrowing of $47 million to roll
the dice with Bob Citron, the violations of the Brown Act, the
embarrassing curriculum audit and the disregarding of community advisory
committee recommendations?
The board has never taken responsibility for any of this. And now they
have the gall to ask us taxpayers to foot the bill for a new school bond?
Why haven’t they managed their finances like any other business in the
“real world?”
The bottom line here is that we have school buildings in a state of
disrepair due to poor district financial oversight and, as usual, too
much money being spent on administrative salaries and perks rather than
programs and modern facilities for kids.
Yet it’s the school bureaucrats that say the public is at fault because
we are too greedy to come across with more money. We already pay more
than is necessary in taxes and where has it gotten us in Newport--Mesa?
I will not vote for a school bond until the district can demonstrate that
the “prudent man rule” is being followed just as it is by all those who
have a fiduciary responsibility to their customers. And we still are
customers, aren’t we? At least that’s what good old Mac Bernd used to
tell us. Thank goodness the founding fathers saw the wisdom of creating a
system of checks and balances so that it will take a two-thirds majority
to pass such an ill-advised measure.
KENT S. MOORE
Corona del Mar
Steve Smith, before you write another column challenging the need for a
school bond and the current Newport-Mesa school board’s ability to manage
the bond monies, please think long and hard about the personal
responsibility you will assume for the outcome of our children’s future
education.
If the bond does not pass, what will our options be? We need a bond for
the very reason that there are no other options. Will you be able to look
the children of our community in the eye and tell them you did the right
thing as they sit in leaky facilities, with nonfunctional bathrooms? What
will your response be to students who are not able to experience hands-on
science because of nonfunctioning outlets in science labs?
As a newspaper columnist you bear a disproportionate responsibility to do
and say the right thing. You have the power and venue to persuade. Please
don’t take this responsibility lightly.
You may not agree with the school board’s past decisions. Many of us have
disagreed with the board on multiple issues. But is shutting down the
bond an appropriate way to signal your disagreement with the school
board? Will it do the right thing for the children of our communities?
The proliferation of parent fund-raising groups across the district is
evidence of the desperate need for school funds.
Parent and community fund-raising groups are not a Newport Beach-only
phenomena. Wilson Elementary in Costa Mesa just completed a multiyear
effort to raise funds for a much-needed playground system. While parents
should be commended on their efforts, it is unrealistic to believe parent
groups can raise the $100 million-plus needed to fix the bricks and
mortar of our crumbling schools. The bond money is essential to ensure
that all schools -- in all communities -- get the repairs they need.
The world is imperfect and so is the school board. For better or for
worse, the school board is the school board and its members are the
people we have to work with on this critical issue.
There are two kinds of people in this world -- those who malign and
complain about the imperfect world around them, and those who take action
to make improvements where they can. Steve, as we approach the crossroads
of this critical bond decision, you still have time to decide what kind
of person you will be.
KIM PAWELL
Newport Beach
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