School bond measure succeeds
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Andrew Edwards
Huntington Beach Union High School District narrowly gained the votes
needed to repair its aging facilities Tuesday night, garnering 57.8%
of the vote.
“We made it,” said Susan Henry, co-chair of the pro-Measure C
campaign committee and school board member, triumphantly. “We’re
thrilled, obviously. Now, we can go back to real life.”
School officials gathered at the home of school board President
Michael Simons, who co-chaired the Measure C campaign committee.
Bond proponents were encouraged by early returns that had the
measure winning with 59.4%.
“I’d rather come from ahead to win,” Simons said.
Measure C is a $228-million bond to patch up aging schools. The
bond’s project list includes plans to make improvements on all eight
of the of the district’s high schools.
In addition to repairing existing structures, bond revenue is
planned to construct new classrooms at Huntington Beach, Ocean View
and Westminster high schools.
To pay for the new classrooms, the district also needed money from
Proposition 55, a $12.3-billion state bond for school maintenance and
construction. That measure just barely squeaked by on its way to
approval, passing with 50.6% of the vote. With both initiatives
passing, the district can plan to complete all the improvements laid
out in the project list.
“We will be moving forward on our entire bind project list,” said
Patricia Koch asst. supt. For business services.
Repairs outlined in the measure’s project list -- bond revenue
cannot legally be spent on improvements not on the list -- include
replacing fire alarm systems, seismic upgrades, roof repairs and
fixing restrooms.
Voters living in the area served by the school district had to
decide whether improving school buildings was worth raising their own
taxes. To pay off the 30-year bonds, property owners will be required
to shell out $30 per $100,000 of assessed value.
Campaign co-chair Nancy Jenkins estimated the average cost per
property owner would be $75.
Trustee Matthew Harper has been the sole dissenting voice against
the bond. He has often said he thinks the district needs a bond to
make repairs, but would have rather approved a bond that had stricter
oversight provisions.
Harper also expressed concern with the amount of votes the bond
needed to pass. Prior to the passage of Proposition 39 in 2000, local
school bonds required a two-thirds majority to pass. School bonds
need 55% of the vote to be approved, as long as the initiative
provides for an oversight committee.
“Voters might want to take a look at restoring the two-thirds
threshold,” Harper said.
Measure C is the third bond affecting Huntington Beach since the
rules changed. In 2002, voters approved bonds benefiting schools in
the Coast Community College District and Huntington Beach City School
District. None of the bonds were approved with two-thirds of the
vote.
“Property owners are going to be paying not one, not two, but
three school bonds,” Harper said.
Measure C proponents had an advantage in the election as no formal
opposition group ever formed. Though the initiatives backers,
“Citizens for Quality Schools,” did not have to compete in a contest
of campaign literature and counter-arguments, volunteers spent many
hours working on behalf of the bond. Parents were organized into a
volunteer network who kept their noses to the grindstone until the
last minute.
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