Letter to the editor
The news that the Huntington Beach City School District is going to
put a general obligation bond on the ballot next spring is indeed
heartening and welcome. Our schools’ needs have not diminished and
passing a school bond measure is as important and necessary today as it
was a year ago. Indeed inflation will only increase costs in the future.
Our schools have been well-maintained over the years. Visit or drive
by your neighborhood school. You will see fields and lawns that are
watered and mowed, buildings that are painted on a regular schedule and
classrooms that are clean and conduciveto teaching and learning. Children
have ample textbooks and are served by an outstanding teaching and
support staff. Performance is high on standardized tests and most of our
schools have been designated by the State of California as
“Distinguished.”
What you will not see is the schools’ inability to use technology due
to insufficient energy and classrooms that were constructed with only one
or two electrical outlets, heating systems that are obsolete and water
and sewer systems that are constantly under repair. Our schools do a good
good job of educating our children, but the fact is these facilities are
simply old and need to be modernized.
This isn’t surprising since the schools were built at the same times
as the communities they serve -- neighborhoods largely constructed in
the 1960s and 1970s. With a single exception, our schools range from 30
to 70 years old. They were built by an older generation and now it is
time to repair them.
The cost will not be insignificant. But the cost of not modernizing
our schools will be far greater in the long run.
Let’s face it, quality schools attract quality people; people who are
willing to pay a premium for the education of their children. This
premium is what increases property values. In addition, well educated
kids, with good schools and facilities, stand the best chance to succeed
and stay out of trouble. This provides safer communities and a quality of
life that you can’t find everywhere.
Last June a bond measure failed. A reason cited by some individuals
was the issue of what to do with the district’s three closed school
sites. In March of 2000, a community advisory committee recommended
maintaining the LeBard site as a district administrative center, securing
a long-term lease on the Gisler site and, by a very slim majority,
selling the Burke site.
As the committee was divided on the issue of selling the Burke site,
so was the board of trustees and voters.
Trustees have elected to maximize lease income on two closed sites --
Gisler and Burke -- and use the funds for other facility needs that
cannot be financed through a bond measure. Maximizing lease income has
the potential to generate significant revenues while preserving both
sites for future use as schools if needed, as open space for community
recreation and youth sports or as an asset to be sold in the future.
Not everyone agrees with the direction the board has taken to maximize
its lease income and one can argue whether the district would be more or
less likely to to get a better return with a sale or lease. But in
neither case is the district “sitting on an asset” and whatever ones
position might be, it is the children who have become innocent bystanders
in this debate. Children should not suffer because adults have
disagreements.
A successful bond measure will make certain the district is able to
repair and upgrade schools and classrooms.
My fervent hope is that the community will come together with a single
strong voice of support for children and schools in the spring.
DUANE DISHNO
Huntington Beach
Editor’s Note: Duane Dishno is the former superintendent of the
Huntington Beach City School District.
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