Pool committee, district finally starting to mix
Andrew Wainer
City, community and high school district officials will meet Friday to
figure out how to raise the $1.5 million needed to build a new aquatic
complex at Huntington Beach High School.
The Huntington Beach Union High School District placated a parent
uprising last week when district and city officials pledged renewed
financial and logistical support for the rebuilding of the moribund
Huntington Beach High School pool, which has been unused since 1992.
Members of the “Take the Plunge” community fund-raising campaign fired
verbal volleys at last Wednesday’s board meeting, accusing the district
of neglecting its commitment to work with the city and community to
rebuild the pool.
“The district told us the pool would be completed by the summer of 2000,”
parent Sandra King told district officials. “Now that seems impossible.”
Rick Plummer, whose three daughters attend the school said officials
echoed King’s frustration.
“They [district officials] have not demonstrated the leadership or
commitment necessary to construct the pool,” Plummer said. “It has not
been a team effort.”
Community members have been urging the district to take action on the
pool since 1991, said Huntington Beach High School Foundation President
Sylvia Garrett. But it wasn’t until the Aquatics Boosters joined with the
foundation in 1997 that fund-raising for the project got off the ground.
The marriage of the two groups gave birth to the Take the Plunge
campaign, which raised $600,000 over the course of a year and a half.
Campaign members also forged a partnership with the district, which
pledged to help bring the $1.5-million aquatic project to fruition.
Garrett said the campaign gave her and Aquatic Booster president Tom Shaw
a crash course in fund-raising.
“We became very good at grant writing,” Garrett said. “We appealed to
Boeing, Bank of America and anyone else we could talk to for money,”
And they succeeded.
The collection of more than half a million dollars in such a short time
stunned city and district officials and led some campaign members to feel
they were carrying all the burden of the project while others were doing
nothing.
By the Oct. 12 board meeting, parents and residents were losing their
patience, and they let district officials know it.
“I understand their frustration,” Garrett said. “The district welcomed a
partnership with us, and now they are backing out.”
But just two days after campaign members’ anger peaked, the city and
district called a Joint Committee meeting to reexamine the project.
Councilmen Dave Garofalo and Ralph Bauer, Supt. Susan Roper and members
of the Take the Plunge campaign were on hand to update disgruntled
parents about status of the pool project.
The district quickly announced it would add $170,000 over 10 years to the
pool campaign through its Oak View Redevelopment Project. The report of
concrete aid from the district soothed the resentment.
“I think the district is finally starting to be proactive,” Garrett said.
“They are engaging in real dialogue and using real numbers.”
Garrett was also encouraged by the city officials’ support of the
campaign. Garofalo was particularly resolute about finishing the pool in
a timely manner.
“Take the Plunge has delivered its part in raising money for the
project,” Garofalo said. “We owe it to them to do our part.”
“These people practically killed themselves raising that money,” Bauer
added.
Garofalo also recommended creating a task force to identify funding
sources for the remaining $800,000 needed to finish the project.
State and federal grants, corporate and community funding and selling
naming rights were some of the possible sources identified by the joint
committee.
Tom Shaw, who as president of the Aquatic Boosters helped Garrett raise
the money for the pool, was also pleased with the committee’s results.
“I feel positive that the city is motivated to finish the facility. I
also think the school district is doing everything possible to finish the
project,” Shaw said.
Garrett, who only days earlier was fuming at the district’s inertia on
the pool project, also waxed optimistic.
“It looks like we are finally on the road to starting a partnership,” she
said. “The way it was supposed to be.”
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