Egan brings promise of a moderate voice
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Deirdre Newman
Tom Egan may not have stepped up to the plate on his own, but with
the support of his fans, he rounded the bases and beat Wendy Leece on
Tuesday in the only upset of a Newport-Mesa Unified School Board
incumbent.
The Westside resident’s supporters said they expect his election
to bring a more moderate voice to the board and increase the
trustees’ productivity.
“I think Tom’s a good choice,” said Cyndie Borcoman, Newport Beach
resident. “He’s a conservative person that will reflect on all the
issues. Wendy also said that, but she’s a lot more extreme.”
Egan received 53% of the vote, Leece 48%. The morning after his
victory, Egan said that he’s ready to put his problem-solving skills
to work on complex challenges facing the district such the state’s
budget woes.
“They’re going to try to balance the budget on our backs and on
the backs of cities, so it will be difficult to even do business as
usual,” Egan said.
While Leece was a gracious loser on Wednesday, she expressed
frustration about how difficult it was for her to run against what
she characterized as an intense effort to oust her.
“It would have been a lot easier to not file and to bow out
gracefully because I know what [the people who wanted me out] are
capable of doing to get rid of a conservative, independent voice, and
not allow that one out of six to represent the community,” Leece
said. “I knew the cost to me personally and emotionally would be
great.
“But I chose, rather than taking the easy way out, to continue one
last time to represent a viewpoint that I’m sorry will no longer be
represented,” she said.
Egan was among a select number of persons asked to run by some --
including outgoing trustee Jim Ferryman -- who wanted to unseat
Leece, Egan said. Leece publicly chastised Ferryman after he was
convicted of drunk driving last fall.
Egan said that his victory proves more that he was chosen than
that Leece was rejected.
“My opponent has disappointed an awful lot of people, and so a lot
of people were looking to get someone who could be more productive
and contribute more,” Egan said. “You just don’t run an empty suit
against an incumbent and win. You don’t easily dislodge somebody like
that.”
Ferryman expressed his satisfaction with Egan’s triumph over
Leece.
“I thought [Egan] put on a good campaign,” Ferryman said. “I
thought the voters made a statement and think they supported more of
[his] viewpoint than Leece’s.”
Now that the campaign is over, Egan wants to concentrate on
improving teachers’ productivity by investing in more technology. He
also wants to see Costa Mesa schools match the resources and
achievements of Newport Beach schools.
Egan said he was impressed with what Principal Sharon Blakely has
done at Whittier Elementary School, where parents take literacy
classes at the school.
“That’s a model we might be able to expand upon and polish and
export to other schools, and we might be able to overcome the natural
difficulties of the Westside and the demographics.”
Ultimately, he wants to give public education in the area more
respect, he said.
“Public education seems to be the Rodney Dangerfield in politics,
and I really want to change that,” Egan said. “I want to improve the
way public schools are perceived in this district ....I want this
district to be so good that people move to the district for the
schools.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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