Committee backs bond plan to upgrade school facilities
Jessica Garrison
NEWPORT-MESA -- After a two-month-long study of the school district’s
crumbling classrooms, a committee of community leaders said Thursday they
agree with most of the findings in the district’s master plan for
schools.
Last June, that plan was released calling for $127 million in necessary
repairs and modernization.
Committee members said that the most realistic local source for paying
for repairs is a general obligation bond.
Mark Schultheis, co-chair of the committee, said school officials and
committee members also hope to receive millions of dollars from the
state, but in order to get that money, the distinct must have local
matching funds.
“The committee believes the district can and should raise some of the
matching funds from all possible sources other than a bond measure,”
Schultheis said. Those include selling distinct property and
renegotiating leases.
“But in the final analysis,” Schultheis added, “a bond measure would
have to be part of the local funding package if the district wants to
make repairs on the scale identified in the master plan.”
The committee will make a formal report to the school board at
Tuesday’s meeting.
“The condition of our school facilities is bad,” a draft of the report
states. “The roofs leak, the plumbing is rusty, and the carpets are worn.
The electrical systems are inadequate, the heating systems are
antiquated, and the restrooms are in disrepair.”
“The conclusion is inescapable,” the report continues. “Our schools
need attention, and they need it now.”
Among the committee’s other conclusions:
* Any repairs and modernization should be equal across the school
district, and the district should set up clear construction and
technology standards for all schools.
* The district must educate the community about the need for repairs,
and must convince the community that the repairs are essential.
Because general obligation bonds require support from two thirds of
voters, they are not easy to pass.
“If we’ve got a chance in hell of making this work, we need a buy in
from everybody,” said committee member Del Hein.
Chuck Cassis agreed: “We need to make sure everyone is behind this and
no one feels like they’re getting the short end of the stick.”
* The district must find long-term solutions to its maintenance
problem, so, in the words of several committee members, “we never have to
do this again.”
District officials said they will explore options for setting aside
money in the budget to pay for ongoing maintenance of computers,
buildings and classrooms.
* More research must be done before final decisions on facilities can
be made. Committee members said they wanted more information about what
districtwide standards should be, for everything from air conditioning to
lunchtime coverings to whether money should be spent to make schools
earthquakes.
Committee members also said they believe that once those standards
have been decided upon, teachers and parents should be able to give more
input into what their specific school’s needs are.
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