Opening of new school delayed
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT COAST -- Students enrolled at Newport Coast Elementary School
this fall will have to wait until January to move into their new
classrooms.
The school, which sits on the corner of Newport Coast Drive and Ridge
Park Road in Newport Beach, was scheduled to open Sept. 5 with 350
students in kindergarten through sixth grade. Those children will now
spend the first four months of school at Lincoln Elementary School in
Corona del Mar.
When students return from winter break on Jan. 8, they occupy their new
school. Although disappointed, Newport Coast parents said they understand
and are being patient about the delay.
“My father always says, ‘People make plans and God laughs,’ ” said Denise
Molnar, Newport Coast PTA president. “All the parents have been very
supportive, but it’s sort of sad.”
Just two months before the school was scheduled to open, project manager
Jim Reed on Tuesday said construction is only about 57% complete.
A major delay in construction is the absence of windows, said Mike Fine,
the district’s assistant superintendent of business services.
“We hoped the manufacturer would come through with them, but it has
become a critical issue for us,” Fine said.
But the late delivery of windows was just the most recent in a series of
delays, Reed said.
The project has been behind schedule since enormous boulders were
discovered when the site was being leveled, he said. The process of
removing the large masses of rock caused an initial setback. The delay
was lengthened by two weeks of rain.
Construction crews are doing all they can until the windows arrive, Reed
said. But without the glass panes in place, exterior walls and much of
the interior work, such as cabinetry, carpeting and painting, cannot be
done.
One upside to the postponement is that there will be no street work while
students are in school, Reed said. The county is planning to widen Ridge
Park Road where the entrance to the school is located. The street was
supposed to be widened during the summer and completed by September, but
the work has not yet been started. However, the road construction will be
finished by the time the school is done, Reed said.
Another bit of good news is that at Newport Coast -- unlike the problems
experienced when Eastbluff Elementary School reopened with no playground
or grass -- everything will be completed and in place when students
arrive in January.
“The one positive thing is everything will be done,” Fine said. “The
grass will be green and mowed.”
Although unfortunate, Fine said, the delay is no reason for alarm because
there is enough room for the Newport Coast students at Lincoln.
In fact, Newport Coast students will be divided into their own separate
classes, so the transition will be easier.
Newport Coast Principal Monique Van Zeebroeck has also assured parents
that all academic programs and extracurricular activities will begin as
planned in September.
Parents seem to be taking the news in stride.
“I think parents understand,” Molnar said. “It’s disappointing, but
there’s nothing you can do.”
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