The Measure I debate
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Tracy Pellman
Measure I is bad for our children and for Huntington Beach taxpayers. By
prohibiting a commercial project at the abandoned Crest View school site,
Measure I will rob our schools and our city of desperately needed
revenues at a time when we need these revenues the most.Those of us who
have dedicated ourselves to building better futures for Huntington Beach
children worked long and hard to develop a plan that would make the best
use of the Crest View school site. Our commitment, along with the advice
of expert financial consultants, came after years of study and numerous
community meetings.
We arrived at the informed decision that leasing the site would be the
best answer for providing the revenues needed to repair leaky roofs,
remove asbestos, fix heating and air conditioning, and purchase computers
to prepare students for the types of jobs and careers they want and
deserve in this fast-paced, high-tech 21st century.
By leasing the site, we would qualify for $27 million in state matching
funds, and receive those funds over time so that they could be used
responsibly and efficiently, and we would retain ownership of the
property at the end of the lease for future income or use.
The assumption that selling the property is best is just plain wrong. By
selling the site, we would receive one lump sum of $6 million (according
to a property appraisal done in August) and that would qualify for state
matching funds all at once. But these funds must, by law, be spent within
an 18-month period or the money reverts back to the state.
There is absolutely no way the school district can, or should, rush
forward to make $27 million in repairs in that brief period of time. And
what of future school children -- how do we pay for their needs?
The school district is prohibited from investing funds. We cannot afford
to lose the $68 million in lease revenues -- desperately needed new funds
-- and give up ownership of valuable property that Measure I would take
away. Selling the site would be selling out our kids.Our city and our
taxpayers will also lose with Measure I because they will be robbed of
guaranteed critical sales tax revenues -- $400,000 each and every year --
that are needed for police and fire protection, to fix our streets and
water and sewer systems, and that are vital to pay for beach cleanup,
parks and open space.
On the commercial side, Huntington Beach just dropped to 20th place among
Orange County cities in per capita sales tax revenues, meaning local
residents are spending their shopping dollars in other cities, and those
cities are reaping the rewards. Without these new sales tax revenues, can
a tax increase for Huntington Beach residents be far behind?
We have heard city taxpayers and parents loud and clear that they do not
want more taxes. Last year’s Measure A, the high school bond, didn’t
receive sufficient support, and similar taxmeasures have failed in the
past. We have also heard that city residents and parents want quality
education for their children, and safe and clean city and community
amenities to enjoy.That’s precisely why school and city officials
listened to leading outside financial experts and pursued the commercial
development at a long-idled school site [near] the corner of Beach
Boulevard and Talbert Avenue, and imposed the most conditions on any such
project in the history of Huntington Beach. The conditions were imposed
not because this was a bad project, but to make the project compatible
with the surrounding community.
Furthermore, this is the most viable site for such a development. Other
mentioned sites, such as Huntington Center, are not viable from the
city’s, the center’s or the business’ position because in most cases
those sites are already committed to other tenants. The Crest View site
has already stood idle for eight years, costing the school district and
city taxpayers significant money. We have a unique opportunity to turn
this site into something positive and beneficial for our residents and
children.That’s why city residents, parents, teachers, city officials,
business leaders and thousands of others committed to a better Huntington
Beach have joined together to say No on Measure I. It’s bad for our city
and bad for our children.
* TRACY PELLMAN is a member of the Ocean View School District board of
trustees. She is also the head of Save Our City, Save Our Schools, a
pro-Wal-Mart campaign.
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