Joseph N. Bell -- Pro
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We’ve finally reached the end of the trail.
In two weeks we will decide at the ballot box whether or not we are
willing to tax ourselves ever so slightly in order to provide our
children with civilized space in which to get an education. Not plush or
frivolous or ostentatious space. Just toilets that flush and faucets that
work and roofs that don’t leak.
I’ve been immersed in this issue for several months, and it is very
clear to me that it all comes back to the question I asked in my first
column on the school bonds: what is best for the kids?
I’ve listened to a cacaphony of adult voices making what I consider
unfair charges against the members of this school board, and tax
nay-sayers who apparently think they have no stake in helping to meet the
cost of educating our young people.
The argument that the taxpayers have no assurance the bond funds will
be spent properly by an untrustworthy school board has been addressed and
destroyed. No fair-thinking person could possibly pursue that argument in
the wake of the assessment of the bond proposal by Orange County
Treasurer John Moorlach.
Using criteria developed with a group of the toughest local anti-tax
conservatives, Moorlach gave the highest grades across-the-board to every
aspect of the Newport-Mesa bond proposal.
The main components of his assessment were: provision of a set-aside
fund for future maintenance; making sure the bond money would not cut
into the district’s future maintenance budget; making sure the bonds are
not all borrowed before the funds can be put to use; ensuring proper use
of the proceeds; and provision of a community oversight committee.
These are precisely the issues on which the bonds have been attacked
by opponents. How could their concerns possibly be dismissed in a more
effective way than the Moorlach report card? In a letter transmitting it
to school Supt. Robert Barbot, Moorlach wrote: “I firmly believe that
those registered voters in your district that intend to vote in favor of
your bond measure can do so with a strong confidence that it is being
pursued with the utmost professionalism and oversight.”
So it comes around, then, to the tax nay-sayers -- and especially
those local citizens who feel particularly put on because they are
already paying higher taxes for their Mello-Roos assessments. They say
they want “equity” in taxation.
But the kids who live in their school district want equity in leaking
roofs. Buying into a Mello-Roos community was a free choice that doesn’t
remove district-wide obligations to kids with leaking roofs -- especially
when the tax bite amounts to a dinner for two once a year at an upscale
Newport Beach restaurant.
If we’re talking about principle here rather than the size of the tax
bite, let’s look at it from the other end. The end that asks, “What’s
best for the kids?” If Measure A goes down, the school kids will be the
injured parties -- and equity in taxation will offer little solace for
that leaking roof.
We could debate endlessly the alleged past sins of the school
administration and school board -- and why this bond issue wasn’t put
before the voters sooner. But to what end?
We come back -- as we always will -- to the roof that leaks and the
toilet that won’t flush and what to do about it. Adult nit-picking in
that vacuum only creates more hot air.
As with any public issue, there are differing points of view, and I
have no personal quarrel with the people who oppose the school bonds. But
I would suggest that this isn’t just “any” public issue. It concerns the
needs of our children in a very substantial way -- needs they can do
nothing about. They can only depend on us to see that they are met
promptly and effectively. How we got here is now irrelevant, and chewing
this over must not be allowed to get in the way of action.
The needs have never been an issue. Even those most ardently opposed
to Measure A are appalled at the deterioration of our school plant. So
the issue is how and when to meet those needs. And it’s hard to imagine a
stronger, better protected, more detailed and highly professional
blueprint for action than Measure A. If you doubt that, check wih John
Moorlach.
So when you step into that polling place on June 6 -- and please do --
don’t kid yourself about the impact of voting “No.” Look it straight in
the eye. You are voting to deny perhaps a whole generation of kids in one
of the wealthiest areas in the country a clean, decent, safe and
wholesome environment in which to be educated.
Ask yourself if you are willing to pay that price to affirm whatever
principle you feel is being violated.
Meanwhile, hopefully -- so hopefully -- two-thirds of your friends and
neighbors will be voting “Yes.”
Before you pull that lever on June 6, take a moment to think about the
import of a “No” vote. And be honest with yourself. A vote agasint
Measure A may very likely condemn a whole generation of kids in one of
the wealthiest areas of the country to a public school education in
structures that a Third World country wouldn’t countenance.
* JOSEPH N. BELL writes a weekly column for the Daily Pilot.
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