Huntington no harbinger, officials say
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- This week’s defeat of the Huntington Beach Union High
School District bond has put local officials on the defensive.
“It really means that it is something we need to look at,” said Serene
Stokes, president of the Newport-Mesa Board of Education. “How can we
make sure the public understands what we’re trying to do?”
District officials’ spirits were lifted last week after Santa Ana and San
Juan Capistrano both successfully passed multimillion-dollar school
bonds. Despite the defeat of a parcel tax in Irvine, many felt they were
seeing a positive trend in voters’ attitudes toward passing bond
measures.
Still, all were waiting in anticipation of the Huntington Beach vote,
which was similar to the type of measure Newport-Mesa voters may
eventually face.
But instead of the predicted victory, the $123-million bond fell short of
the two-thirds vote needed by just six percentage points.
Officials are still buoyed by their preliminary study in Newport-Mesa,
which showed strong community support for a possible bond.
“We have a lot of support, but we don’t want to take that for granted,”
said Stokes, who has begun to meet with officials from Santa Ana and
Capistrano to find out what they did to ensure passage of their bonds.
Other school board members are less concerned, saying Newport-Mesa has
done, and will continue to do, its homework.
“I think that they [Huntington Beach] had not spent as much time leading
up to the decision to go to a bond,’ said board member Judy Franco. “It
seems to me that the amount of time we have put in at each site, walking
each site, does make somewhat of a difference.”
All agree that the pressure to garner support will be reduced if a
proposed “let’s fix our schools” measure is passed on the upcoming March
ballot. The measure would reduce the two-thirds vote needed to approve
local school bonds to a simple majority.
“If that did pass, it would certainly help us because I think we’d get
higher than 50% [voter approval],” said school board member Jim Ferryman.
Either way, the bond’s passage remains a matter of thoroughness and
preparation, Franco said.
“I think you have to look at the fact that statewide bonds that have been
put together carefully have been able to reach 66%,” she said. “Yes, a
simple majority would be easier to reach, but I would hope in this
community we would be able to pass with 66% or more.”
It is concentration on Newport-Mesa and not what is happening in
neighboring communities that will make the difference, said Supt. Robert
Barbot.
“Every district is so different,” he said. “There’s not a pattern. You’ve
got to make your case representative to what your community wants and do
the best job for your own district.”
Barbot specifically disputes any strong similarities between Newport-Mesa
and its neighboring communities.
“If you start generalizing and looking at what other districts are doing,
you really miss the boat,” he said.
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