Holding out for a bond
Andrew Wainer
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- It reads like a Hollywood end-of-the-world movie
plot: ceilings falling in; buildings sinking into the ground; rotting,
termite-infested walls.
But this is not a film script.
These architectural maladies are only a few of the dozens of repairs
plaguing the Huntington Beach Union High School District. Officials said
their only hope is the passage of a $123-million school bond that will
come before voters on Tuesday.
The problems
District officials also cite worn-out electrical systems, leaky plumbing
and cracked floors among the myriad of infrastructure problems it hopes
to solve with the repair bond, which would be linked with $37 million in
matching funds from the state.
The sorry state of the district’s schools is due to several factors,
officials have said.
“A lot of what we are dealing with could not be predicted,” Assistant
Supt. Patricia Koch said. “Some of the high schools were originally built
over unstable peat bogs, and they have been gradually sinking over the
years.”
Other problems are due to less dramatic causes.
“Some things are just old and worn out,” Koch said. “The electrical
systems were built for another era, when we didn’t use computers, and the
main power transformers are inadequate for our present-day needs.”
Other changes involve safety issues such as installing better lighting at
the schools so that they are more accessible at night. The schools were
not built with this in mind.
Five of the six schools that need major repairs are more than 30 years
old. The district has had little in the way of financial resources to
keep them in good condition.
How it happened
“The convergence of declining enrollment, an economic recession, and
financial power transferred to Sacramento has meant that since the 1980s,
our budget has declined drastically,” Koch said.
She estimates that the district’s budget declined by $30 million over
just a few years, starting in the early 1980s. During this time,
California also went from fifth in the nation in education spending to
37th.
Although state education spending has slowly increased in the last few
years, the long financial drought forced the district to focus its budget
on instruction, leaving the district unable to enact the major repairs
the schools needed.
“Our priority was attending to the most urgent health and safety issues,”
Koch said, adding that the 2% the district annually allocates to
maintenance was not enough to stem the tide of disrepair.
Although the schools have on-site maintenance personnel, they were only
able to deal with day-to-day projects and some preventive work.
“Occasionally we had money to replace a leaky roof or repair a floor, but
most of the time we were just trying to keep old equipment running,” Koch
said.
The cure
In June, after years of research, the district’s board of trustees voted
to hold a special repair and modernization bond election to solve the
drastic infrastructure dilemma.
The district built a broad alliance of powerful community members to
support the campaign for the bond election.
Defying the city’s traditionally conservative anti-tax stance, district
officials managed to include Republican Assemblyman Scott Baugh and
Waterfront Hilton chief executive officer Steve Bone in the campaign,
giving it additional clout.
The issue has been presented on the city’s public cable access TV
channel, in flyers, and even at the schools themselves.
And most signs indicate the effort has been successful.
A September poll shows 65% of those questioned would “definitely or
probably” vote to pass the bond. A two-thirds majority is needed to pass
the bond, but Supt. Susan Roper said she thinks the bond now has more
support than it needs to pass on Nov. 9. The annual cost of the bond to
property owners would be about $27 per $100,000 of the assessed value of
their property.
Showing the district’s determination to pass the bond, plans for
construction and repairs have already been commissioned by the district.
If the bond passes, Koch said work could start as early as this spring.
“We will take a multifaceted approach,” Koch said. “We plan to go in and
take whole buildings out of service so that a building can be totally
modernized and repaired at once.”
Koch said the district wants to avoid continually returning to a building
for minor repairs, which would not be time effective.
Temporary classrooms would be brought to the campus while regular
classrooms are undergoing repair, Koch said.
The major repairs would be done chronologically, starting with the
district’s oldest schools -- Huntington Beach and Westminster high
schools.
Koch said the architectural plans for the major construction needed for
the two schools are ready to go.
In order to produce immediate results, minor repairs will begin at all
schools if and when the bond money is available. Koch said such works
would include upgrading electrical transformers, concrete resurfacing and
painting. Koch said this type of work would show the public an immediate
payoff from the bond money.
She said it could be three to five years before all the repairs in the
district are completed.
The district plans to start slow to avoid mistakes and speed the
modernization work, Koch said.
“We would be going from a district that has had no building projects in
recent years to one that would have all of its buildings being worked
on,” she said.
Plan B
Although district officials appear confident about the Nov. 9 vote, they
do have a contingency plan in the event the bond is rejected.
If if it doesn’t pass, the district plans to proceed with the state
modernization program, which could give them $46 million for repairs. The
state offers a program in which Sacramento gives the district a sum of
repair money based on its school capacity, number of campuses, and how
old the buildings are.
The state pays the district $4 for every dollar the district provides
toward the sum. In this case, the district would put up $9 million, and
the state would add $37 million, totaling $46 million for repairs.
The district has stressed that this sum would not be anywhere near enough
to modernize schools to an acceptable level.
Handicap accessibility, restrooms, roofs and sinking buildings would be
some of the priority repairs in this scenario.
Although Koch said the money the state offers in matching funds is
appreciated and needed, it is not nearly enough.
The critics
While the district believes $46 million would not be sufficient to repair
schools, critics of the bond election said the district’s repair needs
are invented and could be covered under its current budget.
William Fitzgerald, a member of the Newman Terrace Homeowners Assn., said
he’s concerned the bond money would be used to pad administrative
salaries.
“At most, the district needs $10 [million] to $20 million to do the
repairs,” Fitzgerald said. “Everything else is extra. They are
threatening school parents into supporting this huge tax increase through
false claims of unsafe school buildings.”
But organized opposition to the bond election has been weak, and even
opponents have admitted that they expect it to pass.
Part of the success of the bond campaign has been its media blitz, which
opponents charge has has passed the limit of legality.
District officials are only allowed to present information on the bond
and explain what the money would be used for. They are not allowed to
openly advocate any position while on the district’s time clock. They
may, however, advocate for the bond on their own time.
Bond opponents have claimed district officials have used taxpayer money
and district time to campaign for a yes vote, a violation of state law.
District officials roundly refute those claims.
As for bond spending, district officials said stringent oversight will
accompany the distribution of funds, blocking any use not explicitly
illustrated and agreed upon by community members.
The oversight
If the bond passes, an independent oversight committee would oversee the
school repairs. The 17-member committee would include a cross-section of
the community, with representatives from a number of organizations, and
will have the same access to information as district staff members. Only
three of the 17 committee members would be appointed by the district. The
rest would be chosen by the community.
District officials also said there are legal safeguards that require the
bond money be spent on capital improvements, not on salary increases.
A report on how the money is spent will be done annually through an
independent audit.
The district also would set aside 6% of its annual budget if the bond
passes to create a repair and replacement reserve, so money will be
available for future repairs.
The idea behind this, district officials said, is to make this election a
one-shot deal, so the district will not have to ask voters again for more
modernization money.
With the assortment of financial safeguards included in the bond package,
supporters call opponents’ charges of waste unfounded.
They also deny they have violated the law through their media campaign.
They say their advocacy of the bond is done outside their jobs and is
therefore legal.
Although bond opponents have threatened to press charges against the
district for violating these laws, no action has been taken.
The students
While adults will continue to debate the merits of the bond until the
actual vote, and probably after, it’s the community’s youth who have the
most to gain or lose.
“There are ants in a few of my classrooms, and sometimes they crawl over
my desk,” Fountain Valley High School senior Cassandra Stewart said.
She also said a host of termites sometimes sit in on her classes.
Adam Miller, a senior at Marina High School, had even more harrowing
tales to tell.
“I am constantly changing classrooms because they get flooded by the
leaky ceilings. I missed school because the swimming pool and shower
heaters are broken,” said the water polo player.
Overflowing toilets is one problem Marina High School battles on a daily
basis, Miller added.
“If they don’t begin to fix these schools now,” Miller said, “someone’s
going to get hurt.”
SIDEBAR
Locals opinions on bond vary
Some love it. Some hate it. Many have never even heard of it.
Although the Nov. 9, $123-million Huntington Beach Union High School
District bond election has been publicized in a variety of media over the
past few months, many locals not immediately linked to the education
system seem oblivious to the issue.
While students and their parents in the district have certainly been
informed of the repair bond in recent months, many older residents and
young adults interviewed on Main Street in Downtown Huntington Beach
seemed to be unaware of the election.
Though many shrugged and offered puzzled looks when questioned about the
issue, some locals expressed strong opinions.
“I’ll vote for the bond because the schools in this town are a tragedy,”
said real estate agent Phil Benson.
Even though Benson’s children have already made their way through the
Huntington Beach school system, he stressed that repairing the schools
would be to the whole community’s benefit.
Jeanne Kimura, who works on Main Street, agreed.
“Huntington Beach High School is especially beautiful, and it would be a
shame if it was not repaired,” Kimura said.
Neda Gane, 24, doesn’t have children and said she would support
alternative methods of raising money.
“I think the schools could raise funds by other means that would be
easier on taxpayers,” Gane said.
Others also expressed hesitancy about supporting a bond, saying the
district should make better use of its budget instead of asking the
taxpayers for assistance.
-- Andrew Wainer
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