Candidate forced to pay
Andrew Edwards
School board hopeful Mark Ahrens will change his candidate statement
and pay thousands in legal fees to two incumbents who sued him over
an inflammatory sentence in his candidate statement.
Huntington Beach Union High School District incumbents Michael
Simons and Susan Henry, sued their 20-year-old challenger claiming he
attacked them in a campaign statement that would have been printed in
sample ballots.
Ahrens original statement criticized “the incumbents” for
“lowering graduation standards” by voting to allow a group of seniors
who did not pass a full year of algebra to graduate. It also claimed
that “my opponents cost the district more than $156,750 by supporting
racial quotas in their intra-district transfer policy until a
California court ordered a halt to their unconstitutional and
discriminatory policy.”
By law, candidates are prohibited from using sample ballots to
criticize their opponents.
Simons and Henry, who are running as a team, filed against Ahrens
on Aug. 16. The three reached a settlement on Aug. 20, according to
court documents. Under the settlement, Ahrens agreed to change his
statement and pay $2,800 in legal fees to the incumbents’ attorney,
Douglas Haubert.
Ahrens was so angered by the suit that he took a break from
studies at the University of Southern California to wage his
campaign.
“I took a semester off because being sued over $2,800 ... was the
final straw,” Ahrens said.
Ahrens had to take out all reference to the incumbents, his
opponents and remove the word “unconstitutional” from his description
of the district’s former transfer policy.
All students receiving waivers were English Language Learners or
in special education programs, Simons and Henry said.
“As far as saying we devalued a high school diploma and lowered
graduation standards is a bold-faced lie, and we challenged it,”
Simons said.
Ahrens is running a tandem campaign with Vivian
Kirkpatrick-Pilger, and both Westminster residents are being advised
by current school board member Matthew Harper. Ahrens and
Kirkpatrick-Pilger describe themselves as conservative, and Harper,
the most conservative member of the school board, opposed the
district’s transfer policy and voted against the algebra waiver.
“I thought it was really disappointing to see [Simons and Henry]
sue another candidate like that,” Harper said. “Sometimes, whoever
has the deep pockets can bully someone who doesn’t.”
Ahrens is not entirely new to school board politics. His mother
Judy Ahrens is a member of the Westminster School District board and
he has helped her campaign in the past.
Mark Ahrens’ contacts with his mother and Harper meant that he
should have been more savvy about election rules, Henry said.
“I was reluctant to sue, and I felt he got bad advice,” Henry
said.
Ahrens’ running mate also criticized the algebra waiver in her
statement, but was not sued. In her statement, similar to Ahrens’,
Kirkpatrick-Pilger charged current school board members with lowering
academic standards.
Unlike Ahrens’ original statement, Kirkpatrick-Pilger’s did not
specify school board members as incumbents in a political campaign.
Henry said she and Simons had considered suing Kirkpatrick-Pilger, as
well.
“We would have done both but we felt we had a better case against
Ahrens,” she said.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers education and crime. He can be reached at
(714) 965-7177, (949) 494-4321 or [email protected].
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