Schools get ball rolling
- Share via
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District opened for the new school
year Tuesday, sporting a number of buildings newly glistening from
summer renovations.
On the same day, the district also enrolled several students who
were grateful to have shelter at all.
By the time school opened across Newport-Mesa on Tuesday morning,
four students from Louisiana had already signed on at Newport-Mesa
schools, having fled Hurricane Katrina to stay with their extended
families in Orange County. With local churches and nonprofits
continuing to shuttle survivors out of the southern states, district
spokeswoman Jane Garland expected the number to rise into double
digits before long.
“They may be here forever,” Garland said. “We don’t know. Each
one’s with relatives at the moment, and it’s up to the relatives.”
Under the federal McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, passed
in 1987, school districts must give homeless students the same access
to services as children with consistent homes. In this case, those
services included transportation, healthcare, school supplies and a
welcoming breakfast and lunch -- all on campuses that most of the
newcomers had never heard of a week ago.
While Newport-Mesa served as an emergency stop for some this week,
for others it merely provided an extra level of luxury. A number of
campuses in the district sported new facilities Tuesday following
summer construction that was funded by Measure A.
Costa Mesa High School, which ended its work in July, had a new
ceiling, a new floor and new lights in its administration building,
clean tiles in the bathrooms, additional lab tables in the science
rooms, and a sensor in the library.
“We had a terrific off-season,” said principal John Garcia.
Students expressed relief at being finished with the Measure A
construction, which made walking around campus, and even
concentrating in class, difficult at times.
“It was horrible,” said freshman Patty McCoy, 14, who attended the
school’s junior high last year. “All the construction was bad because
it was really noisy. It was super-noisy.”
Other schools finished with some or all of their renovations were
Pomona, Paularino, Adams and California elementary schools and
TeWinkle Middle School. The sites removed most of their portable
classrooms as teachers and students moved back into newly furnished
rooms.
During recess Tuesday, California Elementary principal Kelli Smith
surveyed the campus with its repainted buildings and new playground
equipment -- the latter provided by district funds and the school’s
PTA. Only a few portables remained on the grass, one of them housing
the school’s science classroom.
“For the kids, the biggest improvement is definitely the
playground,” Smith said. “For the staff, it’s having bright new
classrooms instead of dull, brown walls.”
The campus still has repairs to finish -- a section by the
playground is partially torn up -- but students could already
appreciate the difference from a year ago.
“I remember all the other classrooms here were just falling
apart,” said Brad Wilson, 10, a fifth-grader at California. “They
were just old and dumpy. Now the rooms are a little cleaner, and
they’re brighter.”
For other schools, the major changes were just around the corner.
Guy Olguin, the seventh- and eighth-grade principal at Corona del Mar
High School, said he expected Measure A work to begin on the campus
by the end of September. Olguin, who worked at Ensign Intermediate
School last year and saw the renovations there, said students should
be prepared for more background noise.
“All the renovations take place inside buildings while there are
other classes going on, so I don’t know how that’s going to affect
the sound,” he said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.