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The story in the Daily Pilot (“Lawsuit provides district windfall,”
Oct. 27) was very disappointing to read.
My son is a third-grade student at Mariners Elementary and has been
diagnosed with high functioning autism. The Newport-Mesa School
District’s “Instructional Education Plan” calls for my son to have an
aide go with him to his classes. The federal and state governments
mandate that special needs children (like my son) have “the least
restrictive environment” provided for them. What this means is that a
child like mine who has special needs, but a normal IQ. level, should be
attending regular class as much as possible and not be taken out of their
neighborhood school and bused to a campus across town to be placed in a
special education class. The district is suggesting this to me, instead
of providing an aide and allowing my son to remain at the school he has
been at since kindergarten.
On Tuesday [last week], I got word that the district has denied my son
an aide, even though the district has written an education plan that
states that my son should be provided an aide. The district has denied my
son the help he needs because they don’t want to pay for it. I am told
that the district has denied aides across the board to most special needs
children, even if their educational plan calls for an aide. I pose the
question: What is the Newport-Mesa School District going to do with the
$800,000 in special education funding this year and the “millions of
dollars” in special education funding to be paid out over the next 10
years and their portion of the $100 million in annual increases if they
are not going to provide for special needs students?
My additional frustration is that we as a parent group have been
forced to form foundations, in which we have raised millions of dollars
to repair our aging schools, and we give money to our teachers at “wish
night” to buy supplies and materials for our children as the district
does not provide enough money per child per school year for materials and
supplies. This money includes the cost of copying curriculum. If you
figure out that it costs 3 cents a page and our children use five pages
per day of curriculum and there are a total of 180 school.
It seems we are forced to raise all of this additional money privately
because if we don’t we will be back at the conditions of when my older
daughter started school at Mariners. Mariners had peeling lead paint that
was 20 or more years old and massive plumbing leaks and carpets that were
20 or more year old, as well. We privately have had to buy and donate the
computers that our children use in their lessons. We have had to buy the
paint to repaint our children’s school, and then show up on a parent
workday and repaint the school. We cannot hang anything on the walls of
our multipurpose room as the walls are made of asbestos and we cannot
penetrate it.
We still have class sizes of more than 30 students in fifth grade and
above, and almost all of the classroom aides provided on our campus are
paid for privately through the foundation.
Where is all of the money going from the state increases in school
funding? It certainly isn’t going to our teachers. Where is the
Newport-Mesa School District spending our money, as it certainly isn’t
going to our children’s education, and where are they going to spend this
million-dollar increase in special education funding if it is not going
to be for providing for special needs children like my son?
KRISTY M. NEUBO
Newport Beach
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