School shuffle riles Newport Ridge parents
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Michael Miller
A neighbors’ group in Newport Ridge is complaining about a proposed
plan by the Newport-Mesa Unified School District that would change
which elementary school their children would attend.
Under the plan, which district spokeswoman Jane Garland said is
still “in the talk phase,” a number of children in Newport Ridge
would be assigned to Lincoln Elementary School instead of the local
school, Newport Coast Elementary School. The Newport Coast Advisory
Committee, a seven-member group that addresses concerns in the
neighborhood, opposes the plan, which it says would divide the
neighborhood and force some students to travel an unfair distance to
school.
“The issue really relates to where kids in the Newport Coast are
going to be required to go to school,” said Jim McGee, chairman of
the committee. “It creates a situation where families who are in the
same neighborhood are going to end up with children in different
schools when redistricting takes place.”
McGee said the committee plans to hold a meeting on the
redistricting issue May 2 at Newport Coast Elementary, with district
officials, parents and other community members invited to attend.
Garland said the rezoning idea came because of the growing number
of students at Newport Coast Elementary, which has an enrollment of
597 children. The district wants to divert Newport Ridge residents to
other schools to prevent overcrowding at Newport Coast.
“If it continues the way it is, Newport Coast would be affected
beyond its capabilities in terms of accepting more children,” Garland
said. “The bottom line is that Newport Coast is not going to be able
to handle the number of children moving into the building.”
In the district’s rezoning plan for Newport Ridge, incoming
students who have older siblings at Newport Coast would be able to go
there, but others would have to start at Lincoln, which is about
three miles away from the neighborhood.
“There’s nothing wrong with Lincoln,” said Newport Beach Asst.
City Manager Dave Kiff. “It’s just an expectation that when you move
into a community, you’ll go to a certain school. Kids at Newport
Ridge can walk to Newport Coast. You can probably walk to Lincoln
too, but there’s a pretty steep hill on the way home.”
Anna Schlotzhauer, whose family recently purchased a house in
Newport Ridge, said she had planned to send her daughter to Newport
Coast in the Fall of 2006 before learning about the rezoning plan.
“We closed escrow yesterday and found out about the proposed
redistricting four days after we removed the contingencies for our
sale,” Schlotzhauer said.
She added that she believed residents of the neighborhood should
be involved in any plans to change school zoning.
“I’ve been told that there is overcrowding [at Newport Coast] and
I understand that,” she said. “Some measure needs to be taken, but
the people who should be involved first and foremost are those who
stand to be affected by it.”
If redistricting becomes a reality, it would not happen until the
2006-07 school year. At present, all children in the Newport Ridge
area -- located on the eastern tip of the Newport Coast community --
attend Newport Coast Elementary. The rezoning, Garland said, would
likely lead to a “domino effect,” with children being transferred to
Lincoln and others being diverted, in turn, to Eastbluff and Harbor
View elementary schools.
“Everyone’s looking at numbers and seeing where to draw the line,”
she said.
* MICHAEL MILLER covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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