Readers Respond
At issue: Support -- this time from students, too -- for Measure A, which
will appear on Nov. 9 ballot.
A very important issue will he on our Nov. 9 ballot. It is important
because the outcome of this school repair bond measure affects each and
every student in the Huntington Beach Union High School District, and
because it is an election. In this country, we have the right to vote,
but not enough of us exercise that right.
Measure A, the high school repair bond measure, will enable the school
district to make some very important repairs to our campuses. Our schools
are old and in need of much more than just paint.
Huntington Beach High School recently celebrated its 73rd birthday and is
long overdue for necessary repairs. Some of the buildings are sinking,
causing extensive structural damage.
During the rainy season many classrooms leak. And in some cases parts of
the roofs are collapsing.
In some areas, the foundations have shifted, making it difficult to plan
outdoor activities.
Our bathrooms are a mess. We need to completely repair and replace major
fixtures and doors. There are some restrooms where there is no privacy at
all because stall doors are missing, and half the faucets, toilets and
showers in the gym don’t work.
We need Measure A to make these repairs now. They are worse than last
year, and they will be worse next year.
Vote yes on Measure A. Our future students will thank you.
TARA GOODNESS
Student, Huntington Beach High School
A very important issue will be on the ballot Nov. 9 -- Measure A, the
school repair bond.
The money from this bond will be used for some very important repairs to
our schools.
The structural damage in some facilities need immediate repair. You think
you are walking in a carnival fun house when walking through hallways
because of the uneven floors. Our bathrooms look as if a hurricane blew
through them. We have no soap or toilet paper dispensers, or even doors
on the stalls!
CHRIS HOLMES
Student, Fountain Valley High School
If you have ever heard a student complaining about the terrible condition
of the school buildings, believe it. That student was not exaggerating.
Our schools are in disrepair, and they will continue to deteriorate
unless something is done about it.
Not only are there not enough bathrooms, but some of those bathrooms
don’t even have doors on the stalls. Fungus grows and thrives on the dirt
and stagnant water that collect in the corners of the tile flooring.
In some classrooms, the stench of mildew growing on the carpets is almost
too much to bear.
When it rains, students inside the halls become almost as drenched as the
ones outside because the roofs leak so bad.
If another large earthquake hit, students’ lives would be in danger. The
sinking buildings and deteriorating walls could collapse at any moment.
Most of us forget that some of these schools are 40 to 70 years old. Our
schools were built so long ago that they aren’t wired for the computer
technology needed to enhance our learning and help us get the experience
that is needed to be successful in the computer age.
The maintenance workers at our school do a wonderful job keeping the
campus clean and doing minor surface repairs. But the repairs the school
so desperately needs are not the type that can be done by routine
maintenance.
Please don’t force us to attend schools that are falling apart and that
may be dangerous to our health. No one wants to go to a school that is
dirty and ready to collapse.
HOLLY MARKWOOD
Student, Fountain Valley High School
In a mid-size U.S. city that could have been anywhere stood a high
school, a proud institution built around the turn of the century. We in
the city thought of it not as old but eternal. Like the cathedral of
Notre Dame or Westminster Abbey, our school was a treasure that would
always be there, a shrine to proud tradition.
Then one day disaster struck -- a fire -- and it was gone.
The school was empty at the time of the fire, and no one was hurt. But a
city grieved nonetheless. People lined up on the street where the school
had once been to collect remnants from the wreckage, as if so many
memories could be captured in brick and mortar. Web sites were set up in
tribute. There was talk of rebuilding, but it was just talk.
It was a fire that destroyed it, but it could have been an earthquake.
This was my high school in Anderson, Ind., but it could have been
Huntington Beach.
How many times I’ve driven past Huntington Beach High School and quietly
appreciated its beauty. What great architecture. What great curb appeal.
I lived in Huntington Beach for years before I ever stepped foot on its
campus. What a surprise it was to see its pitiful condition, the cracked
foundations and leaking roofs. It is far from a safe haven for our kids
during an earthquake.
This summer dozens of volunteers turned out to clean up the school and
make cosmetic repairs, but correcting the condition is beyond the work of
a citizen brigade.
We have a chance at the polls next month to make it right.
Passing Measure A, school repair bond, will let us fix up Huntington High
and other high schools in the district so badly in need of repairs. The
cost to each of us is minimal, but the rewards are greater than we’d
imagine.
Just ask the folks of Anderson.
BOB DEATON
Huntington Beach
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