Westmont could become home for club
Andrew Edwards
The Ocean View School District is in early talks with the local
chapter of the Boys and Girls Club to build a new club at Westmont
Elementary School.
The basics of the possible deal would involve the Boys and Girls
Clubs of Huntington Valley building permanent preschool classrooms at
the Westmont campus in exchange for the right to build a club there,
officials said. The club has also offered to front the costs of
upgrading the electrical system at Westmont.
“They will build seven classrooms and electricity to those seven
classrooms at no cost to the district,” school board President
Barbara Boskovich said. “We’re talking about millions of dollars.”
Under the current proposal, Westmont students and teachers would
have access to the club’s building during school hours, said Mary Lou
Beckman, the district’s chief financial officer. District officials
plan to move preschool services from the Pleasant View campus to
Westmont.
The district has access to state bond revenues to upgrade
Westmont’s facilities, but is not allowed to use state funds to build
new classrooms.
“When the state provides funds for modernization, they don’t allow
you to expand,” Beckman said.
The club provides before- and after-school activities to children,
many of whom would be unsupervised outside of school when their
parents are at work. Locally, the club maintains locations in
Fountain Valley and south Huntington Beach, placing its services out
of the way for families with children in the Ocean View district’s
schools, said Tanya Hoxsie, the chief executive officer for the Boys
and Girls Clubs of Huntington Valley.
“Our club has been trying to build a facility in that north area
of Huntington Beach so we could serve the schools in that area,”
Hoxsie said. “We believe that there are too many kids going home
alone after school.”
Before any deal can be finalized, a significant amount of planning
remains to be completed. The school board has yet to take any action
on the idea, and both the district and the club plan to hold town
hall meetings to collect the public’s input before completing an
agreement.
“We just want to make sure that we do it right for the neighbors,”
Hoxsie said. “Somebody might have some better ideas that we can
integrate.”
If a deal is completed, it could be two years before children can
spend time there, Beckman said. Officials said they anticipate
planning will take one year, and construction one more.
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