EDITORIAL
It doesn’t seem that difficult. Kids and busy streets don’t mix. And
where students are crossing a street, there ought to be a crossing guard
to protect them.
What possible problem could there be?
In the case of Killybrooke Elementary School, the problem appears to be
that same old bureaucratic red tape tangling up Costa Mesa officials who
say a crossing guard there just isn’t “in the budget.”
This comes even though parents want a crossing guard and someone is
willing to volunteer for the position.
How can there not be room in the budget for a volunteer?
Even if the city had to pay a person in the position, its argument simply
doesn’t hold up. What if a raging fire burned down City Hall? Could they
not rebuild it because that wasn’t “in the budget”? Isn’t that what
budget amendments are for?
The need for the crossing guard came up this year -- after the city had
approved its budget that included crossing guards for several other
schools. The intersection clearly qualifies for the added protection. A
study found that more than 80 students cross in the morning and more than
50 in the afternoon, when the city’s threshold for a guard is just 40
students. Hiring a crossing guard at the school would cost the city an
extra $3,000.
As Killybrooke PTA President Joyce Christiansen said: “A child’s life is
worth any amount of money.”
So, what is the problem?
City officials say that a crossing guard shortage has resulted in a few
vacant positions elsewhere in the city, so they can’t hire a guard at
Killybrooke until those jobs are filled. The city told Killybrooke
officials that the parent volunteer would have to fill one of those empty
positions before a guard could be stationed at Killybrooke.
Where is the logic in that?
If the city can’t find the people to fill those slots, it should be up to
the parents at those particular schools to step in and help out.
This whole headache could have been avoided had city staffers simply used
common sense and recommended a budget amendment to City Council members
as soon as the problem arose.
It appears that will have to happen now anyway, and in the meantime we
have all lost just a little more confidence in government.
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