Cost oversight caught
Lauren Vane
When the Huntington Beach City School District Board of Trustees
voted in early March to close Kettler Elementary and relocate the
district administrative offices, it was a decision intended to
address financial concerns and declining enrollment in district
schools.
Moving the district offices to Perry Elementary would free up the
Le Bard site for sale or lease and maximize capacity at the Perry
facility.
However, board members were hit with surprise, and disappointment,
when new Supt. Roberta DeLuca revealed that the decision was not a
cost-saving decision at all.
DeLuca announced at an April 19 meeting that instead of saving
money, the move could cost the district an estimated $700,000.
“We’re looking at all the options,” DeLuca said. “With that
number, now we’re looking at perhaps scaling that back.”
For a school district tasked with cutting $2 million from the
budget by June, the cost oversight is staggering.
“Had we known up front that it would cost this much, it wouldn’t
have even been an option,” said President Cathy McGough.
When DeLuca presented the figure, she said her staff had estimated
the number based on improvements that would be necessary for the
district offices to be moved to Perry. A new parking lot, electrical
infrastructure and phone system upgrades were among the more costly
expenses.
“We’re still in the process of seeing how we can do this without
causing a burden to the general budget,” DeLuca said.
When the board voted on the combined motion in March, McGough said
she did not think modernizations at Perry were necessary for the
move.
“We did look at it [the cost],” McGough said. “We looked at it in
a different view.”
An itemized list of the costs of moving the district office was
not presented at the time the board made its decision, said Trustee
Shirley Carey.
“You have to vote on the best information you have at the moment,”
McGough said.
Currently, Perry has modernized classrooms in addition to six
portables, according to Perry Principal Elaine Keeley. The estimated
figure assumed that the district offices would need to go into
modernized facilities. Now faced with the high cost estimate,
trustees say that modernized facilities might not be necessary.
“If we can put kids in a portable for classes, we can put the
district offices in portables,” said Trustee Brian E. Rechsteiner.
Rechsteiner has always opposed Perry as a location for the
district offices, one reason being the lack of adequate parking, he
said.
The board met Tuesday night and held a study session to review the
budget updates. While the board chews on the new figure, Carey said
there is no rush to move the district offices and plenty of time to
discuss other options.
“This has been a hectic Spring for everybody and you just can’t
deal with everything at once. You have to deal with it piece by
piece,” Carey said.
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