THE BELL CURVE -- Joseph N. Bell
If you’re undecided about how to vote on Proposition 26 on the March 7
ballot, take a long look at your neighbors in Irvine.
There, a few months ago, a little more than one-third of the voters in an
Irvine Unified School District election cut the legs from under one of
the model school programs in Orange County by defeating a critically
needed bond issue.
As a result, Irvine school trustees are facing the economic necessity of
closing several neighborhood schools while they try desperately to alert
voters -- only 25% turned out for the last election -- on the importance
of supporting the school bond in another try in April.
Prop. 26 would reduce the vote requirement for local school bonds from
two-thirds -- hung around our necks by Prop. 13 in 1978 -- to a simple
majority.
It would thus prevent those philosophically opposed to the change from
joining up with a predictable minority -- made up largely of older people
on fixed incomes, families without children in school, and citizens who
would vote against any tax, regardless of its merits -- to torpedo the
will of the majority in providing for the education of our greatest
resource: our children.
Although Newport-Mesa won’t have a school bond on the March 7 ballot, the
passage of Prop. 26 is critical to avoid the same fix in which Irvine now
finds itself.
Why this two-thirds monkey should be put on the backs of schools, of all
public facilities, is ironic, indeed. It is doubtful in Orange County
today that a two-thirds majority could be cobbled together for the Second
Coming, especially since the opponents always turn out at near full
strength while the proponents snooze. The few occasions on which it has
happened have been downright miraculous.
There’s a special irony, too, in the March 7 election. The same citizens
voting on Prop. 26 will also be asked to vote on that wonderfully named
Safe and Healthy Communities Initiative that would require a two-thirds
vote on new airports in Orange County, thus effectively making sure there
won’t be any -- especially at El Toro.
A principle seems clearly involved here. What is a person to do who is
outraged over this ploy of the antiairport people and votes against it,
but still wants to maintain a two-thirds majority for passing school
bonds?
Although the issues are different, the principle of simple majority rule
versus an almost unobtainable two-thirds majority isn’t. In both
instances, a vote in favor of requiring a two-thirds majority to carry a
ballot issue is virtually a death sentence against the issue. Is this
justified in one case and not the other?
The critical need for passing a school bond in Newport-Mesa -- whatever
the ballot requirement -- is a separate matter that merits full attention
later. But the passage of Prop. 26 would carry a message to our
schoolchildren.
By restoring the ability of a majority voice in Newport-Mesa to provide
funds to ensure our children a proper environment for learning in the
years ahead, we would no longer be discriminating against them in matters
of public policy.
We have some clear choices in the months before we vote on Newport-Mesa
school bonds. We can spend them demonizing school board members or
administrators for the present sorry state of our schools. Or we can lay
the principal blame on Proposition 13, which I consider much more
culpable.
So does John Nicoll, who was Newport-Mesa’s superintendent when Prop. 13
was passed. Says Nicoll: “By taking away from school districts the
ability to act with a simple majority, this proposition has prevented
local citizens from providing the education they wanted for their
children. As a direct result of Prop. 13, school districts have, for many
years, been required to make a choice between quality in the classroom
and the proper maintenance of buildings.”
But spending our time and energy indulging in the blame game doesn’t
offer the prospect of much help to public school students in this wealthy
district who are working with ragged and outdated textbooks (as my
stepson did at Harbor High) or coping with cold showers (or none at all)
in locker rooms or being taught in decaying and potentially unsafe
structures or studying in a library that hasn’t been updated for two
decades.
The important thing -- the only important thing -- is that we focus on
the issue of primary importance here: the well-being of our kids.
When I moved my family to Orange County 40 years ago, the quality and
availability of education at every level was one of the greatest
attractions. Keeping California in the forefront of American education
was a commitment taken very seriously from the governor’s office right
down to the poorest school district.
Today, California education is floundering, put to shame by the economic
priorities of much poorer states to whom the erosion of educational
funding is a last resort. We can always elect new school board members to
replace those whose actions we deplore. But we can only remove the
restraints imposed on school funding by a clear message in the referendum
process -- starting with the removal of the two-thirds requirement for
the passage of school bonds.
So the first clear choice before us -- after, of course, we shoot down
that God-awful Safe and Healthy Communities Initiative -- is to vote for
Prop. 26 on March 7. Thus we keep open our options for a new airport at
El Toro while we provide a whole new set of options for the proper
education of our kids.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a Santa Ana Heights resident. His column runs
Thursdays.
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