MAILBAG - Nov. 2, 2000
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Pilot’s Coast district endorsements off base
Your editorial of Oct. 31, titled “Our education choices” lacked the
very discernment its rhetoric dispensed.
Jean Forbath is supported by the union because of its objective to
eliminate KOCE, one of the crown jewels of the Coast Community College
District. KOCE is supported by hundreds of thousands of residents of
Orange County because of its contributions to extended and continuing
learning opportunities for young and old alike.
KOCE is dependent upon support from the community and federal
government as well as a small portion from the community college budget.
What good will it do if she follows the union dictates and destroys such
a valuable program?
Your editorial also erroneously stated that Forbath was a college
professor. She has never been a college professor as you espoused. That
prestigious title is reserved for persons with demonstrated ability,
including the appropriate academic degrees and experiences. Part-time,
substitute community college teaching is not the appropriate experience.
As for your support for (Daniel) Kittredge, I find that his
involvement with the Bolsa Chica wetlands is hardly the executive
experience required of a candidate seeking the position on a board of
director’s multimillion-dollar educational institution. You conveniently
forgot that the Coast Community College District is a world-class
community college district that is known worldwide for its creative and
cutting edge programs including extended learning, international
programs, marine education, technology and KOCE.
Both Paul Berger and Armando Ruiz have relentlessly maintained the
vision that will ensure quality educational opportunities for all
students. I further believe they can and will continue that service far
into the future.
RONALD B. LINSKY
Costa Mesa
Vouchers give parents a chance to exercise choice
Gay Geiser-Sandoval’s Oct. 24 column proved her strong connection to
the present public school system prohibits her from seeing the
possibilities of true reform.
Public schools teach children that sexual lifestyles other than
heterosexual should be perfectly acceptable. For families who disagree,
the voucher system will allow parents to place their children in schools
that are consistent with their beliefs. However, for the majority of
people I would assume the above argument is a weak reason to decide for
or against vouchers.
Geiser-Sandoval also claims a strong concern that private schools will
not have any new regulations placed upon them without approval from the
state Senate or by a two-thirds vote of the people. That doesn’t frighten
me. It is one of the most important safeguards of the initiative. Without
it, private schools could easily become nothing more than an extension of
the public school system because of regulations placed upon them by the
state.
I am voting for Proposition 38 because it allows parents a choice. Far
too many students, usually in poor districts, are trapped in public
schools that no longer properly educate them. These children are not
given the same opportunity to succeed in life, and ultimately too many
give up trying and end up a burden to society.
Our public schools have plummeted from once being the envy of the
world to now struggling just not to be last. Public education’s
continuous answer to the problem is more money and experimental learning
programs that end up contributing to the problem rather than solving it.
It makes no sense to support a system that has shown no significant
improvement decade after decade.
I’m voting yes on Proposition 38 to give each family a choice of the
school they consider best for their children. This will help public
schools, not hinder them because nothing gets people more motivated for
improvement than good old American competition. The best schools will
thrive and if there are schools that refuse to improve, at least those
who attend will do so by their own choice.
DONNA MARTIN
Newport Beach
Drug courts are needed, not Prop. 36
Dave Fratello, campaign manager for Proposition 36, and anyone else
who backs this measure is wrong.
We need the drug court. It is an alternative for problems that can be
solved in recovery programs, not jail cells.
Eliminating addiction will eliminate the problems that go with the
territory -- robbery, assault, sales, as well as drug overdoses and
hospital stays.
Of course we could spend more money on prisons and inflated salaries
for staff rather than drug courts. Orange County is beginning to look
more and more like a police state when it slams the door shut on
alternative solutions.
Although new jails are a popular solution, we need something
different. Introducing programs such as drug courts provides a way out,
even though it is just the first step.
Prisons and jails are the problem, not the solution for alcoholics and
addicts. The drug court is a solution.
ROY WARD
Newport Beach
Readers would like to see more from candidates
Candidates should not be required to pay to have their statement in
the voter guide.
However, since they do, the Daily Pilot could provide a real service
to the public by printing a special page that contains statements by all
the candidates.
That would certainly be more newsworthy than printing pictures of
readers in various places in the world. Does anyone care about that
besides those shown? Everyone should care about what the candidates have
to say and sometimes it is difficult to attend a forum where they are
speaking.
AGNES K. DUBBERLY
Costa Mesa
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