School board approves bond measure
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- The school board will ask residents to pass a
$110-million bond to repair deteriorating schools -- the first of its
kind in the history of the 35-year-old district.
In a unanimous vote Tuesday night, the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District’s Board of Education decided to put the bond measure before
voters June 6 in a special election.
If passed, the bond would fund major repairs to all of Newport-Mesa’s 29
schools, including the replacement of leaky roofs and outdated plumbing,
upgrading electrical systems and stabilizing buildings against the threat
of earthquakes.
“It doesn’t take a genius to take a look at our facilities and see that
we have serious needs,” said Supt. Robert Barbot. “This is the best
option for fixing those needs.”
School board president Dana Black said if the bond measure passes,
students will be able to learn in a safer, healthier environment.
“I’m just thrilled for our kids, our teachers and our community,” she
said.
District officials decided on a June 6 special election rather than
waiting until November so they can apply as quickly as possible for $53
million in state matching funds.
The passage of the bond would not ensure the additional $53 million from
the state, however.
Newport Heights resident Kurt Yeager gave a sigh of relief following the
7-0 vote and said the bond measure is a sound plan that will renew
residents’ investments in their homes and their community.
“We’re out of excuses,” Yeager said. “The board and the community know
what is needed. Now it’s time to do it.”
In light of the district’s marred financial history -- including
borrowing $47 million to invest in the Orange County pool just before the
bankruptcy and a multimillion-dollar embezzlement -- the board felt it
needed to include safeguards in the proposed bond to gain community
support.
The measure created holds the district to several key commitments:
* All proceeds from the bond must be used for the specific purposes
outlined in the district’s facilities master plan.
* Prior to the bond election, a citizens’ oversight committee must be
created to oversee spending of the funds.
* If the bond passes, the district must establish a reserve fund within
five to seven years, equaling 4% of the district’s annual budget, for the
upkeep of schools once they are repaired.
The district will go ahead with the election regardless of the passage of
Proposition 26. That initiative, which will appear on the March 7 primary
election ballot, would lower the voter approval requirement for school
bonds from a two-thirds majority to a simple majority vote.
The type of bond that has been chosen by the board would be paid off in
25 years with level payments, Barbot said, with the average payment being
$23 for a home that has an assessed value of $100,000.
With some Newport-Mesa schools as old as 70 years, talk of repairing the
crumbling buildings has been going on for decades.
The district began to take a serious look at the issue two years ago.
With the completion of a district master plan last year, a facilities
committee comprising 30 local business and community leaders was created.
The committee was charged with determining the specific needs of the
schools and recommending a plan of action to the board.
As those community members walked the schools and detailed the problems,
the price tag for fixing them continued to rise.
The group’s co-chairman, Mark Schultheis, presented the committee’s final
report in January with funding needs totaling $163 million. The committee
recommended the board put a bond of $110 million before the voting
public.
Before the school board’s vote Tuesday night, Schultheis was one of a
dozen speakers who urged the board to put the decision in voters’ hands.
“That resolution, if passed tonight and enacted by the voters in June,
contains the blueprint for rebuilding schools,” he said. “It contains the
hopes of this community for better schools for our children.”
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