Poll results show split on bond vote
Andrew Wainer
As the vote nears for a controversial $160-million bond issue for the
Huntington Beach Union School District, a poll of voters shows the debate
in a virtual dead heat.
Results of the poll, conducted in September by the Fairbank, Maslin and
Maulen research firm, indicate:
* 41% of registered voters would vote “yes” on the bond issue.
* 24% would probably vote yes.
* 7% would probably vote no.
* 15% would definitely vote no.
* 13% were unsure.
The bond issue needs a two-thirds vote to pass. The poll had a 3.5%
margin of error.
If the bond passes, homeowners would be asked to pay $27 per $100,000 of
the assessed value of their home for about 30 years.
The bond issue has been a point of contention in the district for months.
It entered the legal arena in August when opponents of the bond were
ordered by the court to delete a paragraph from a ballot statement that
bond supporters said was false. And last week, opponents accused the
district of violating education codes by using tax dollars to promote the
bond.
The issue has been further complicated by reports that the state would be
unable to pay its share of the $160-million total school repair bond even
if is is approved by voters.
Huntington Beach Union High School District officials said those doubts
are ungrounded.
“I think it’s misleading,” said district Supt. Susan Roper. “We are
qualified for the funds, according to the state’s guidelines, so we are
not concerned about the money.”
Indeed, Patricia Koch, assistant superintendent for business services,
said two of the five schools already have been approved for funds from
the state.
But published reports last week quoted neighboring Westminster School
District officials as saying they were denied $20 million in state repair
funds after the state “ran out of money” in June. Westminster planned to
use the money to help upgrade 16 schools in the district.
The shortfall forced Westminster to delay the project indefinitely,
eroding the district’s confidence in Sacramento and leaving some district
officials bitter.
“I wouldn’t count on the state at all,” Public Information Officer Trish
Cannady said.
The delay has been even more frustrating, Westminster officials said,
because it was one of the first districts to have its modernization plans
approved by the state.
“We were done ahead of time,” Cannady added.
State program manager Dave Ziah said the notion that the state is out of
money is absurd. He said the state is set to dispense $1.3 billion for
modernization and repairs, starting July 1, 2000, when the new funding
cycle begins.
Ziah said that when the 1999 funding cycle was exhausted in June, it was
legally prohibited from dispensing more repair funds until the start of
the new cycle in July 2000.
That, he stressed, is different from the claim that the state is not
going to provide the money or that it is out of funding.
“The money has been authorized and will be allocated, but we cannot use
it until next year.”
The backlog in applications has forced Sacramento to create a “waiting
line” of schools ready to receive state funds. Nevertheless, Ziah said
Westminster and Huntington Beach Union are both well in the funding queue
to receive state money come July.
“Historically, districts positioned [like Westminster and Huntington
Beach Union] will receive state funds,” he said. “I think it’s a slam
dunk that they will receive the money. I don’t see a problem. I think
both districts are in a really good spot.”
About 5,600 school districts have applied for a piece of the $9.2-billion
dollar state bond passed last November under Proposition 1A. The bond was designated for repair, modernization and construction of state schools
from the elementary to the university level.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.