Family Time -- Steve Smith
One of the ways that school districts across the country make up for
budget shortfalls is by sponsoring fund-raisers. Throughout the year,
kids sell candy, wrapping paper, plants, discount cards and other stuff
to raise money for the various activities in which they’re involved.
The Costa Mesa National Little League is a model of volunteerism. The
league is run totally on the donated energy of the parents of the
players. There isn’t a single paid person on the league’s books -- even
the umpires are volunteers.
To keep the fields looking good, keep the entry fees low (they are the
lowest in the region, perhaps in the county) and to maintain a constant
supply of equipment and other hardware, the league relies on a few
fund-raisers.
The biggest fund-raiser has kids selling a plastic card good for
discounts around town. At $10, this card is a steal. The 50%-off deal on
cut flowers at the Conroy’s at Harbor Boulevard and Baker Street could
get you your money back in one visit. And, yes, this is a shameless plug
for the card, which is the single largest source of revenue for the
league.
Players are also supposed to sell candy, but I am certain that the
boxes of four dozen bars wind up more in the offices of the players’
parents than they do in the hands of kids who sell them door-to-door.
A few days ago, a Costa Mesa man was arrested in connection with the
kidnapping and molestation of a 12-year-old girl who was selling candy
door-to-door as part of a school fund-raiser. On Wednesday, my Daily
Pilot colleague Byron de Arakal asked the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District to consider eliminating school-sanctioned fund-raisers. He
asked, “Would [the girl] be safe and unharmed today had she not been
vending candy on the school’s behalf?”
That question -- if not directly, then by implication -- is a
declaration of the liability of the district. The fact is that the
district is no more responsible for the tragedy that befell the girl than
I am. But I have no doubt that some lawyer somewhere is going to seize
the moment and try to convince 12 people that they are.
Why not blame the police? After all, shouldn’t a resident of this city
be able to walk the streets safely? Perhaps we should raise and lower our
taxes annually on a floating basis depending upon the crime rate. At this
moment, the Police Department is no doubt furious that this crime has
been committed, yet they are no more responsible for this specific
incident than I am.
Many, if not most, of the fund-raisers in which my kids have
participated have specific instructions about when, where and to whom
items should be sold. But the instructions do not address the source of
child molestations in America. Contrary to very popular belief, nearly
all of them -- almost 100% -- are committed by someone known to the
victim. How about blaming California voters? After all, had they not
approved Proposition 13 in 1978, the district may not have needed the
money from this candy drive.
De Arakal also discusses how fund-raising is spinning out of control.
Having been knee-deep in this type of fund-raising for many years, I
think most kids don’t care much about how much they sell and don’t lose
any sleep over their failure to win a prize. Most kids, from my
experience, hit up their relatives and a few family friends and that’s
it.
Of course, there are exceptions.
Two years ago, one Little League genius stood in front of the Conroy’s
on Valentine’s Day, selling the discount cards to desperate men before
they went in. He sold so many cards that day that the flower shop had to
exclude future Valentine’s Days from the days on which the discount is
valid.
The school board is not at fault. A man the police have arrested,
71-year-old James Harper, is suspected of being at fault. Eliminating
fund-raisers because a monster may have been loose is only going to
reinforce phony scare tactics and deprive kids of worthwhile activities.
Instead of throwing out the baby with the bath water, we should insist
on reinforcing the fund-raising guidelines that are already in place.
I don’t have a problem with my kids selling stuff. If de Arakal or
anyone else does, don’t participate and find another way to help your
kids receive validation. It really is as simple as that. But to lay the
blame for this girl’s tragedy at the feet of the school board is
unproductive and unfair.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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