Summers of labor yield debated compensation
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Steve Virgen
Third in a three-part series
It’s an unwritten law, the understood truth for most high school
coaches: Making a fortune should not be expected.
Knowing that, Bob Serven said not getting paid for his summer work
as a coach at Costa Mesa High still bit at him and, in turn, was one
of several reasons that drove him to resign April 3.
Serven’s resignation was the first of four that came within a
three-month span at Costa Mesa. Serven was the only one of the four
who said lack of summer pay for coaches was one of his reasons for
resigning.
Serven is the Costa Mesa boys basketball program’s all-time
victories leader, posting a 79-56 record, including a share of the
only league title the Mustangs have won in their 45 varsity seasons.
“I do coach for the love of the sport,” said Serven, now an
assistant for the Mater Dei boys basketball team. “There are just
certain things you are supposed to have in order to be competitive.
You have to be there in the summer. It’s hard for me to justify going
to work, leaving my kids to go work for free. How many parents decide
they’re going to work for free? If you want us to provide teaching
for the kids during the summer, because that’s what we do, then pay
us. We’re not asking for $40 million. It’s not like I’m asking to be
paid like I’m [Duke University coach] Mike Krzyzewski.”
Typically, coaches of high-profile sports make between $2,700 and
$3,000 for their respective season. In the summer, they do not
receive a stipend.
Doug Deats, who resigned as baseball coach in late June, also did
not like the lack of summer pay for coaches but said he resigned to
spend more time with his family.
Glenn Mitchell, who resigned as boys and girls track and field
coach in late June, said his sole reason for stepping down was to
spend more time with his wife and daughter. His timing just added to
Costa Mesa’s chaos, which included the resignation of boys athletic
director Dave Perkins, who was fired by the school as football coach
last week.
Perkins said he was told to resign in January because he was
“rattling too many cages.” He also said he was fired because of a
misunderstanding with school administration over a check from a
summer football camp that was mistakenly made out to him.
Perkins said the check was intended for the school’s booster
program, which is standard procedure.
Costa Mesa Principal Fred Navarro did not comment on reasons for
Perkins’ dismissal Monday, saying it was a personnel matter. He
commented, though, on the recent developments with Costa Mesa
athletics.
“The issues are not related,” Navarro said of the resignations and
the firing. “Each issue is separate. Everything has been discussed
with [Perkins]. We’ve been direct with him. We’re not at liberty to
share any of that information right now.”
In regard to lack of pay for coaches, Navarro supported an
improvement.
“I don’t think compensation has kept with the times for what our
coaches do,” Navarro said. “Back in the ‘60s, the money was different
back then and it was good compensation. I think that’s something that
needs to be worked out in the future. Financially, we should be
looking at ways to reward the coaches. These are tough times. There
aren’t a lot of options to try and offer worthy compensation to these
individuals who have put in hours upon hours during the summer. It’s
just a reality that people have to pay the bills.”
Coaches can get money during the summer.
Those who want to donate money to the school’s athletics in Costa
Mesa usually make out a check to the booster club or to the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District, which then cuts another check
for the athletic program or the coaches as a matter of income during
the summer, said Jaime Castellanos, the district’s assistant
superintendent for secondary education.
Coaches will conduct camps in the summer to raise the extra
income, but students at the camp are not required to pay. If no money
comes in, the coaches don’t get paid.
Sometimes, as in the case of Costa Mesa girls basketball coach Jim
Weeks or softball coach and girls athletic director Sharon Uhl, the
coach will work for free during the summer and make sure all of the
money goes to the sports program.
Last year, the district paid a stipend to coaches at Costa Mesa
and Estancia, while coaches at Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar
stayed under their usual format, Castellanos said.
It is apparent that Back Bay high schools, Corona del Mar and
Newport Harbor, are located in an affluent area, as opposed to the
less affluent, sometimes poor Costa Mesa, Castellanos said. Back Bay
high schools have more students than the Costa Mesa campuses. Thus,
coaches at Back Bay high schools make more money during the summer
than coaches at Costa Mesa and Estancia. Several coaches at Costa
Mesa and Estancia don’t like that, but they continue to coach because
they love their profession.
The diversity between the four schools causes some coaches to
leave, as in the case of Serven.
“Newport-Mesa is incredibly unique,” said Castellanos, a former
high school coach. “This is my fourth district that I’ve worked in
and this is the most diverse, politically, economically and socially
that I have ever been in.”
Serven and Perkins weren’t the only coaches to leave citing pay.
Rick Buonarigo, a former softball coach, also resigned, in part
because of the pay during the summer, he said.
Buonarigo, a former Orange Coast College coach, did not have his
credential for the high school level last year. In the summer, the
district paid him substantially less than the other coaches at Costa
Mesa and Estancia for that reason, Buonarigo said. He was hurt by
that, he said, and it became one of the reasons for his resignation
last year.
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