Parents crusade to repaint Huntington Beach High
Jennifer K Mahal
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Huntington Beach High School’s math and science
building is covered with age spots. Paint cracks on its two-story beige
body need a moisturizing new coat.
But looking at the Main Street building’s worn face doesn’t sag the
spirit of Gail Pelliccioni. Instead, it inspires the Huntington Beach
mother of two teenagers to try her hand at some building cosmetology.
Pelliccioni is determined to see the math and science building painted by
the end of spring break. She is spearheading an effort, along with the
school’s Parent-Teacher-Student Assn., to raise $14,000 by mid-April to
cover painting costs. The Painting the Way campaign, which she chairs,
has already raised $8,000.
“We have a right to make this building a nice place for the kids,”
Pelliccioni said. “We can’t change the world, but shame on us if we don’t
try and do a few little things.”
Their efforts have received a big boost from Ed Laird, who agreed to
supply the paint, she said. He owns Coatings Resource, a company that
manufactures paint.
The group still needs money to pay the painters.
“What’s really great is to live in a community where parents go above and
beyond what the district and the site can do,” Principal Frank Berry
said.
Painting, said association treasurer and High School Foundation chair
Sylvia Garrett, is fairly low on the district’s list of priorities.
With electrical and plumbing work needed in many school buildings,
worrying about the cosmetic side ranks pretty low. District officials
have estimated that around $160 million is needed to repair its aging
schools.
“All of the repairs are much too extensive to do as parents,” Pelliccioni
said, “but we can hire painters.”
The math and science building’s 18 classrooms were built in 1976 and
never repainted, said Garrett, who has a sophomore at the school.
“The paint that you see on there is the original paint job,” she said.
Painting a school is not like painting a home. There are layers of
regulations and policies involved, Garrett said. However, Pelliccioni and
the association has been doing everything by the book, she said.
“[The association] has the reputation of punch and cookies,” Garrett
said. “It does an awful lot more than that.”
And, if anyone can get the job done, it’s Pelliccioni, who two years ago
headed a successful effort to renovate the Ethel Dwyer Middle School
auditorium. She has an eighth-grader attending there.
“She was a godsend,” Dwyer Principal Ian Collins said.
Pelliccioni raised at least $50,000 during Dwyer’s Return to Glory
campaign. Not stopping there, she oversaw reconstruction of the
auditorium in summer 1998. If anyone can get the high school’s math and
science building painted, Collins and Garrett both agree it’s
Pelliccioni.
“Believe me, she’ll get it done,” Collins said. “She’s just a tiger when
it comes to that.”Pelliccioni said she has five years left at the high
school between her two kids, and she plans to make a difference.
“I always try and tackle projects no one wants to do,” she said. “No one
works fast enough for me.”
Pelliccioni wants to get this project started by spring break, which
begins April 17. The painters have to washthe building and start
preparations, she said.
But if the money doesn’t come through in time, the project will be pushed
back to summer, she said.
Donations for the Painting the Way campaign can be sent in care of Gail
Pelliccioni, 18201 Ivorycrest Lane, Huntington Beach 92648. For more
information, call Pelliccioni at 842-0882.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.