MAILBAG - May 24, 2001
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Library’s tactics pits playhouse against the public
I have been a resident of Huntington Beach for only a couple of years.
However, I have been involved with many community and professional
theaters.
Never have I seen a situation filled with political and egotistical
intrigue like the one the Huntington Beach Playhouse faces. Ron Hayden, a
single individual, is evidently a man who can manipulate and twist
figures and words in such a way as to convince many of the City Council
that a relatively small, community-based, nonprofit group such as the
Huntington Beach Playhouse could threaten the livelihood of Huntington
Beach residents by using space and resources that cost residents library
programs and children’s’ books.
Hayden’s agenda is quite clear -- either the Playhouse must become a
profit-generating tool and submit creative control of the playhouse to
him or they should leave.
Hayden spouts artificial figures and inflated projections with ease.
If his motives were so pure he might consider cutting his own salary in
half. That would at least ensure that the children receive their books.
What library officials are doing is tantamount to discrimination. They
are basically saying, why should we rent to a lowly nonprofit group that
we do not control, when we could make lots of money leasing the theater
for meetings to corporations that can pay us full price? Nonprofit groups
exist for a reason. They perform services to the community for a
reasonable price. Sometimes for free. The Playhouse makes enough money to
pay their expenses, and the rest of their income is given back to the
public in the form of scholarships.
The library would have the playhouse raise their prices. What is next?
Should the playhouse begin charging per cookie at their concessions?
Should they tier their seating so that audience seats in closer proximity
to Hayden’s office are of a higher cost? Perhaps the encore personnel,
who volunteer their time as ushers for each show, should also pass around
a collection bucket to benefit the library.
The idea of volunteerism seems to have been lost with Hayden.
Something that Hayden has not yet quantified is the worth of the
playhouse to the library. Many of the playhouse’s audience members may
never have stepped into the library had it not been for the playhouse. As
a result, the outreach of the library has benefited. Those audience
members now use library services, and yes they probably spend some of
their money at food concessions or on media materials and room rentals.
If the playhouse were forced to move to another location, perhaps even a
location outside of Huntington Beach, then that move would definitely
make it less convenient for those dual patrons to visit the library.
Obviously other nonprofit groups are valued. This is evidenced by
their low rents paid as a formality (some as low as a dollar a year.)
What the City Council needs to quantify is the worth of Huntington
Beach Playhouse to Huntington Beach. If they listen to Hayden, then they
will agree that the playhouse’s worth to Huntington Beach is nothing.
But the people of this city and the patrons of the playhouse that
helped elect the council may have a different message.RAY BUFFER
Huntington Beach
Ocean View taxpayers paying price for missing funds
I have recently learned that the Ocean View School District has passed
up $21 million in state grants from Proposition 1A to finally fix up our
schools.
The district knew it was eligible for these grants since early 1999,
yet it failed to apply for this free money. Proposition 1A was funded by taxpayers and has now been granted away to hundreds of other school
districts that diligently applied for the money.
The Ocean View School District has let down our kids and the
taxpayers. In my opinion, the district is guilty of poor planning and
fiscal irresponsibility.
For years I’ve heard the district cry poverty when it came to repairs
and upgrades for our schools. Then along comes a perfect opportunity like
Prop 1A and what does the district do? They sit on their duffs and
largely ignore a $9.2-billion pile of state money with a “free” sign on
it.
The district’s irresponsibility of Prop 1A has left them holding an
empty bag with millions of dollars in school repairs and upgrades undone.
Westminster Elementary School District, with 17 schools, received $19
million; Fullerton Elementary School District, with 19 schools, received
$20 million; even Compton Unified received $16 million.
What did Ocean View receive for its 15 schools? Only $1.2 million --
a mere 5.6% of what they could have gotten.
Although the taxpayers in this district are paying the price for Prop
1A, we are only getting a pittance in return. Because Supt. James
Tarwater and the board of trustees failed to apply for the $21 million,
the 10,000 kids of the district won’t soon enjoy the $2,100 of school
improvements that they are each entitled to.
As part owner of the Ocean View School District, I ask that the board
of trustees wake up and go find the $21 million that our schools have
coming. If our elected trustees can’t do their job, it’s time we remove
them from office and elect someone else who will.
ED FALZON
Huntington Beach
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