Spring View residents speak out on gymnasium proposal
Angelique Flores
After months of silence from the Spring View neighborhood,
residents asserted their discord with the Ocean View School District’s
plans to build gymnasiums at the four middle schools.
Representatives from the Marine View and Mesa View middle school
communities welcomed new trustees Barbara Boskovich and Pam Ogdon and
gave the board a rest from the usual line of discourse on the gym
project, only to make room for the upset Spring View residents.
Speaker Stefan Rubendall, who lives in the Spring View Middle School
neighborhood, dispelled any belief the residents’ previous lack of
involvement was out of agreement with the project.
“Our past silence was due to a lack of knowledge,” he said.
Those in attendance cited many of the same concerns that were raised
over the last few months by residents in the three other middle school
areas. Among the list of issues are traffic, funding, parking, renting
the facility and property values.
Unlike many other residents from the other middle school areas who are
willing to work with a district to reach a compromise on the project,
many of these residents clearly told the board they do not want any
gymnasium in their neighborhood.
To support the residents, voices from the Crest View United campaign,
a group opposed the lease of Wal-Mart at the closed Crest View School
site, resurrected themselves at the meeting. Speakers drew comparisons of
the old Wal-Mart battle to the current gymnasium project.
“It’s our job to slow down these things and listen to the community,”
Trustee Carol Kanode. “There’s lots of things to look at.”
In other business at the meeting:
* Kanode, who has served on the board for 10 years, was unanimously
elected president. This is her second term as president. Ogdon was
unanimously voted in as the board clerk.
* The district honored Efren Barrera with the Wave Maker Award.
Barrera, a custodian at Harbour View Elementary School, works to ensure
administrators, staff and students return to a clean and orderly site
each morning. He goes above and beyond his assigned duties to help staff
and administration on special projects.
* Assistant Supt. of Human Resources Michael Luker updated the board
with the tentative contractual agreement between the district and the
California School Employees Assn. The proposed collective bargaining
agreement allows for a 10.96% increase to the salary schedule of
classified employees retroactive to July 1. A public hearing will be held
Jan. 16.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.