Parents tick off joint-use library worries
Deirdre Newman
NEWPORT BEACH -- A small group of Mariners Elementary School parents
voiced concerns at Tuesday’s school board meeting about a proposed
library that would be shared by the public and the school, and also what
it would take to alleviate those concerns.
As the June 14 fund-raising deadline draws near, the parents continued
to express their fears about having students intermingle with the public
during school hours. But they also proposed a panacea: Change the
proposal from co-location to joint venture, which would eliminate the
school and branch library being housed under the same roof and create a
partnership instead.
As the proposal stands now, a new 14,000-square-foot library would
replace the existing Mariners Branch Library and would be on city
property adjacent to the school. Students would no longer use their own
school library but would go, with their teachers, to the children’s
section of the public library instead.
The effort to build the joint-use library started in the fall as
Newport Beach City Council members joined with library and school leaders
to obtain state money for the project.
But the Proposition 14 funds earmarked for building joint-use public
libraries would cover only 65% of the project’s $3-million price tag. The
remaining million must be raised by the community. As of earlier this
month, supporters had raised more than $300,000.
Most of the seven parents who spoke at the meeting charge the
joint-use proposal is inherently unsafe for schoolchildren and should be
nixed.
“I don’t see any reason why we should put our children at risk when
there’s absolutely no reason to do that,” said GailStroth, who has a
fourth-grader at the school. “I would love for the school to keep its own
library.”
And that option is a viable possibility, said parent Linda Duffy, who
said she has been elbow-deep in research about joint-use library safety
since the proposal emerged. Duffy and other parents formed a Web site in
earlier this month to educate the community about the risks they believe
are rife in the proposal.
Duffy’s homework paid off, as state officials have confirmed her
research is correct.
Richard Hall, library bond act manager for the state office of library
construction, said the Mariners school can keep its own library and still
qualify for top-priority Proposition 14 funds as long as it is involved
in a joint-venture with the new Mariners Branch Library. That would
entail the branch library incorporating some kind of service that
benefits students in kindergarten through 12th grade, such as a computer
center, a family literacy center or a homework center.
School board members acknowledged that children’s safety comes first
and said they will take the parents’ concerns and suggestions into
consideration when they vote on the proposal on June 11.
“The health and safety of our kids is one of our major
responsibilities,” said Judy Franco, school board president. “Without
having that factor, no matter how high our educational standards are,
it’s not going to happen.”
Supporters of the project spoke Tuesday at the Newport Beach City
Council meeting, which takes place at the same time as the school board
meeting.
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