A battle of words
Marissa Espino
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- While backers and opponents of a $123 million school
repair bond battle over semantics, Huntington Beach Union High School
District students will spend another year in their classrooms waiting on
repairs.
“The truth is there are a lot of problems that need repair,” said Amanda
Crater, a 17-year-old Huntington Beach High School student. “They
shouldn’t let politics get in the way of something like this. It’s about
time they have a bond.”
The battle is over the wording of a statement planned for the Nov. 9
ballot.
Steve Bone, who supports the bond, filed two suits in August against the
Orange County Registrar of Voters over the school bond that is scheduled
to be on the ballot.
Bone said misleading statements were made in the opposing and rebuttal
statements written by bond opponent William Fitzgerald.
On election ballots, supporters and non-supporters are allowed to write
their opinion about a particular item and then a second statement to
rebut the other group’s views.
“I was outraged. When you are trying to have a fair election and the
statements aren’t fact, then you won’t have a fair election,” said Bone,
who is co-chairman of Repair Our Neighborhood Schools and chief executive
officer of the Waterfront Hilton Beach Resort. “Fortunately we have a
responsive judicial system that could stop incorrect information from
coming to voters.”
Bone won the first lawsuit Aug. 17 when a superior court judge agreed to
strike a part of the opposing statement that said passing the bond would
allow millions of dollars “to be diverted to administrative salaries or
other perks.”
A second suit was filed to eliminate four portion of the rebuttal
statement against the bond. The court hearing for that suit was scheduled
for Wednesday.
The rebuttal alleges the district “foolishly gave away our school land to
Home Depot and wanted ‘racial quotas for student transfers.”’
Other statements in the rebuttal claim that bond supporters are scaring
parents into supporting a tax increase; that supporters are attempting to
confuse voters by scheduling the bond during a special election; and that
opponents should never reelect the politicians who support the measure.
Fitzgerald, who is a board member of the Newman Terrace Homeowners
Association, said he felt all rebuttal statements were accurate.
“The solution is for the school board to learn how to manage their money
better, not to give them more money to grossly mismanage it,” he said.
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