Egan was right choice
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Again, I opened your paper to Mailbag (Nov. 17) only to read
another letter about the loss to our children and to us since Wendy
Leece no longer is able attend to her conservative agenda on the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board of Trustees. I now felt
the need to address why I voted for Tom Egan.
Let me preface this by stating that I have lived in the city of
Costa Mesa for 27 years. My three children all attended the schools
from the beginning and graduated from Estancia High School. They all
received excellent educations from this district’s schools.
Leece never had any of her five children attend our schools until,
conveniently, this election year, when she faced opposition. Then,
and only then, did she finally enroll her child at Ensign
Intermediate School. This was a very transparent political strategy
to me, anyway.
Why weren’t our district schools good enough for the education of
her children until now, when she faced such opposition? When she ran
unopposed, she kept her children home to school herself, or in
private schools.
Now the question is, now that she is no longer a school board
trustee, is her child still enrolled?
The most important reason that I and, I presume, many voted
against her is that I am also a teacher in the district.
I teach at Rea Elementary. I was one of the original teachers
selected to help open the school in the fall of 1997. Since that time, our staff has more than doubled.
Under our excellent leadership, Rea has implemented numerous new
programs with the use of technology, and we teachers have worked very
hard to bring up our Academic Performance Index scores by 44 points
this last year. If I am not mistaken, this was the second highest
growth within the district.
Leece was elected to be our representative on the school board and
was to support us, listen to our concerns for our school and for our
students. By law, school board members are supposed to visit the
schools in the district which they were elected to represent each and
every year.
Leece had, I suppose, higher and loftier goals on her agenda than
to take the time to actually set foot on our campus. We have done the
calculations, and since September of 1997, she has perhaps been on
our campus a total of five minutes.
Each and every time she was scheduled for a visitation, she
canceled. It became very apparent to our staff that she had her own
agenda. Our staff and our nearly 800 students were minor
considerations. Her nonverbal communication screamed this message to
us.
When asked about the importance of technology being implemented in
the schools, during the election, and in your paper, she had the
audacity to cite our school as a great example. How would she have
known what we were doing? Perhaps through osmosis?
She did not represent our school, a school in her elected zone,
enough to even step foot on our campus for more than five minutes in
more than five years.
Egan came and spent more than an hour on our campus during his
campaign. He received my vote for obvious reasons. The joke around
our school is that “we will miss not seeing Wendy Leece around here.”
SHARON BAKER
Costa Mesa
Our society laughed in the 1960s when conservatives said that the
liberals wanted a “cradle to grave” society. People in the ‘70s
laughed again when liberals asked for a “Great Society” and a
guaranteed annual wage. Many stopped laughing in the ‘80s for a
while, until George the First said: “Read my lips.” No one could stop
laughing at all in the ‘90s, with Bill and Hillary on their throne.
Today, we can at least look honestly at what was wrought from the
last 40 years of progressive liberalism.
Our children can now look forward to a great job at Wal-Mart,
Wendy’s or McDonald’s after graduation from high school. Socialized
medicine seems a certainty; civil and privacy rights -- as we once
knew them -- are completely gone; major corporations -- not just a
few -- are found to be without any sense of propriety or veracity;
and state governments and corporations across America are going broke
due to pension funds that are running out of money.
Then there is Wendy Leece, the sweetest, kindest person we have
ever known, despised and attacked with impunity by mean-spirited,
power-hungry, back-pocket-leaning liberal school board members. When
one of “their own” disgraced their so-called oath, he was given a
pass. Not Leece. She spoke as she believed, honest and straight.
She has personal values? Oh, they moan, how could that be
acceptable in our Jerry Springer, situational ethics and “think world
village” mentality? Shouldn’t a doctor be sent to go to school with
every child? Think of the jobs that would create.
Leece wanted the original formula, the one that worked for 2,000
years: “Teach your children well.” And teach them with the sense and
opportunity to develop values, which would serve them over a
lifetime, not just until the next new “socialized acceptable”
textbook was released.
The good news is that more than 35% in the school board’s District
4 got the message and voted for either Ed Loyd or us. If one in three
got the message, at least we have hope. Yes, we blatantly supported
Leece and we still do. Honor and character may not mean much to those
who now serve, but they certainly do to us.
Thanks to Steve Smith for saying a truthful, nice word about a
wonderful lady.
RON AND ANNA WINSHIP
Newport Beach
* RON WINSHIP ran unsuccessfully for the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District Board of Trustees this fall.
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