County boards of education not essential
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Newport-Mesa Unified School District Supt. Robert Barbot is dead
wrong in his comments to the Pilot assuming that the elimination of
county superintendents and county boards of education would have an
adverse effect on the district (“Officials eyeing proposed reforms,”
July 31).
He obviously hasn’t read the succession of Orange County Grand
Jury Final Reports along with several educational analysts’ and
contract auditors’ warnings to the public about the waste,
duplication of services and mismanagement that has existed at the
Orange County Department of Education for decades.
However, a strong case might be made for the retention by the
department of certain services such as limited special-education
offerings, juvenile court school settings, specific legal services
and some teacher-training functions.
And most, I think, would agree that districts are capable of doing
their own monthly payroll, currently a function of the county
Department of Education.
Instead of downsizing, as they were meant to be doing when most of
the surrounding school districts unified and became more
self-sufficient, this huge and mostly unnecessary bureaucracy has
continued to grow, unchecked. And, what about the somber warnings
given to the public many years ago by the Little Hoover Commission,
which called for a complete reorganization of county departments of
education?
As far back as 1969 and 1970, there were serious concerns voiced
regarding continuing duplication and overlap. Just go out and ask
most Newport-Mesa teachers what the Orange County Department of
Education has done for them lately and see how they reply. Even
Assemblyman John Campbell, according to the Pilot article, has stated
that overhaul is essential to a successful future for state
government.
For Barbot to proclaim that the department is important for
providing a needed layer of oversight is simply wrong and misguided
given the facts. He knows it but won’t rock the big,
educational-establishment boat. The state Department of Education in
Sacramento and our own school board give us more than sufficient
oversight. We don’t need this expensive and questionable middleman to
provide a quality education for our youth. Once again, remember the
responsibilities of the county departments were supposed to diminish
rather than increase as counties throughout the state became more
populated. Everyone would probably agree, though, that county
department of education services are still needed in rural counties.
Don’t forget that the Orange County grand jury is your county
government watchdog. Taxpayers would do well to heed its advice and
the advice of others who have thoroughly researched this issue.
KENT MOORE
Corona del Mar
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Moore is a former candidate for the Coast
Community College District board and was a member of the Orange
County grand jury from 1981 to 1982.
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