Election menu gives voters a clear choice
- Share via
It isn’t often in this era of poll-watching and fuzzy political
positions that voters have the opportunity to make a clear choice on
issues. But the upcoming Newport-Mesa Unified School Board election
provides such an opportunity in the contest between Wendy Leece and
Tom Egan.
Leece is on record more copiously than any other local
officeholder. About one-third of my “Education” file is devoted to
issues she has introduced or public statements she has made. Since
there is no such record for Tom Egan, I decided to assemble an
assortment of Leece’s definitive issue statements and weigh them
against Egan’s views on the same subjects. That required getting
together with Egan, whom I had never met.
He turned out to be both soft spoken and direct -- and no stranger
to irony and humor. He didn’t dodge any questions or equivocate, but
rather weighed and addressed them much in the manner of an aerospace
engineer, which he was through most of his working life.
Egan has lived on the Westside of Costa Mesa for 16 of the past 18
years. His wife, Eleanor, is a member of the Costa Mesa Planning
Commission and is active in local civic affairs. His two sons and
three stepdaughters all attended public schools. And when aerospace
took a downturn a few years ago, Egan returned to school to earn a
masters of science degree in civil engineering at UC Irvine when he
was 55.
So on to issues.
Leece has repeatedly tried to inject “creationism” and
“intelligent design” into public school science classes, saying most
recently: “Information we have today is able to show many flaws in
the Darwinian model of evolution ... and that there is fresh evidence
that supports and defends a concept of life based on intelligent
design.”
Said Egan: “The politically acceptable response is that it is not
a part of school policy or curriculum. Actually, intelligent design
is a way to get evangelizing into the classroom. It’s dogma, not
sciences, and teaching it in a science class would be appalling.”
In reacting to her rejection as school board president, Leece
wrote in the Pilot that her views were “overwhelmingly accepted in
this community.” Egan said: “I don’t know about her statistics. But I
do know that you can’t push your way to acceptance of your ideas. You
can only do it through respect and persuasion.”
During a difficult negotiation with the teachers’ union, Leece
said that “many teachers just show up, waiting for the clock to tick
until their retirement day. Trying to help these teachers will just
waste more money.”
Egan said: “My parents always voted for school bond issues. I
think of that when I look at the present incredible distrust of
government and the teaching business. It’s time to turn that around.
As I tour our school district, I see so many good things going on,
and I also see that teachers are next in importance to parents in the
support of our kids.”
Leece opposed a grant application to the states’ Early Mental
Health Initiative that addresses and treats at-risk students with
school adjustment problems and a grant to help fund Rea Elementary’s
Healthy Start school-based clinic, saying: “We’re creating a public
orphanage by being a nanny and a parent for kids.”
Egan said: “Any free money needs to be examined. Everything comes
with strings, and we need to be wary of acceptance that might hurt
us. It’s bogus to use the schools as a social force to do things the
federal government won’t do. However, by state law, public schools
must educate any kid that comes to the door, so we look for the best
education for the dollar. From that point, it is dumb to withhold
food from kids, who learn a lot better on a full stomach.”
During the public debate about her attempt to post the Ten
Commandments in our public schools, Leece said: “Let the kids know
the highest authority is God. That’s what I saw as necessary while I
was raising my kids. Everything we do revolves around these
commandments, a practical acknowledgment of honoring God.”
Egan said: “I believe in a bright line between church and state.
There’s no margin here. Any effort to cross that line is just
evangelizing.”
Leece tried to ban “Snow Falling on Cedars” and “Of Love and
Shadows” from the reading lists of Advanced Placement high school
English classes, saying: “In this community and in this school
district, do we allow students to read literature that contains very
passionate scenes that are of an adult nature and that have sexual
meaning?”
Egan said: “When I was a young father, my job was to help my kids
become independent of me at 18. So I encouraged my kids to make their
own decisions and to think critically. I figured if they were ready
for a piece of literature, they should read it. If they weren’t
ready, they knew it, and I wanted them to have the opportunity.”
There was more, but this will give you an idea of the
philosophical distance between these two candidates and make it
possible to decide which philosophy you would prefer to see calling
the shots in our school system.
During my meeting with Egan, when I was struggling with a menu
that listed a dozen different kinds of hamburgers, he was bemused at
my confusion and said: “You know, our schools are something like that
hamburger menu. When you and I went to school, there was a simple
curriculum, and not a lot of choice of hamburgers. Now it’s very
different, and we must deal with those complexities. I think I can
contribute there by helping bring in more and better technology.”
Finally, there was a small window into Tom Egan early in our
conversation.
When I asked Egan where he grew up, he said: “I’m still growing
up.”
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.