Report Card
Mike Sciacca
Enthusiasm is still high in the Huntington Beach City School District
nine days after voters passed a $30-million bond to pay for improvements
to city schools.
“The first thing I told my one daughter was that the leak in her
classroom roof will now be fixed,” said Jan Conrad, co-president of the
Peterson Elementary School, who has two daughters in schools within the
district. “I also think this will mean more books and more computers for
our students, as money that was used before for the maintenance and
upkeep of old and outdated equipment will now be freed up to use
elsewhere.”
Sowers Principal Paul Morrow said he hopes that a new telephone system
will be one of the first things they see from the bond money.
“Ideally, this new phone system will give parents better access to
teachers and warrant more accountability for our students,” he said.
“This new phone system will impact parents, students and administrators
by providing us with modern technology, instead of the very outdated
system we now have.”
Teachers currently do not have phones in their classrooms, Morrow
pointed out.
Huntington Beach City School District Supt. Gary Rutherford promised
on election night that new telecommunications systems would be a high
priority.
“All schools will have something done this summer and we will be
looking closely at what we feel are our high-profile, high-impact
projects,” he said. “But the very first thing we will do as a district is
develop a citizens oversight committee.”
At Tuesday’s school board meeting, trustees will begin discussing the
formation of the citizens oversight committee, said trustee Robert Mann.
The oversight committee will include a cross section of the community,
with a business person, a senior citizen, a parent with a child in the
district school, a parent active in the PTA and a member of a taxpayers
organization all involved.
No district employees will be included.
Members will serve a two-year term and will be able to hold no more
than two consecutive terms, Mann said.
“Getting the bond passed was so satisfying, but the first thing I see
that should be done is that there needs to be an evaluation of what the
critical needs are within the district,” he said. “Second, whatever we
do, I strongly believe that o7 qualityf7 should come first and that
the money is spent wisely. My main concern is that we do not rush in to
do repairs. Having repairs done in a thought-out and timely matter will
prevent future costs.”
Students at Sowers are really showing heart
Students at Sowers Middle School will run their hearts out today at
the school’s annual Heart-a-thon, a 5K run/walk/in-line skate event that
will benefit the American Heart Assn.
Event participants have sponsors pledging money, said Sowers Principal
Paul Morrow. The school’s goal is to collect more than $35,000 -- the
amount raised last year.
“This is a big, big event at Sowers every year,” he said. “It’s a
community-driven event and a big part of it is teaching our kids to reach
out to the community. Our students really get behind this cause.”
More than half of the student body will walk, run or skate a course
that begins at Brookhurst Street and Huntington State Beach and travel
north to Beach Boulevard and back.
Driving home a victory
Two Marina High School students and their instructor showed their
automotive expertise by winning the ninth annual Automotive Technology
Competition at Hyundai’s National Technical Training Center in Fountain
Valley.
Mitch Harris and Evan Arnold, with the help of their teacher Mike
Rittenhouse, beat out 10 other teams in the hands-on competition designed
to measure their technical and diagnostic abilities.
The competition covered engine management, vehicle safety, chassis,
and body and electrical problem-solving.
Harris and Arnold, both seniors at Marina, each earned $5,000 in
scholarship money to the Universal Technical Institute and a chance to
compete in the 2002 National Automotive Technology Competition scheduled
for April 2-3 in New York.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.