Report Card
School district officials from Huntington Beach joined forces with
others from across California to fight for education funding.
With the budget crisis hovering over the state following Governor Gray
Davis’ proposal earlier this month to cut dollars for schools, a
contingent of Orange County superintendents traveled to Sacramento
recently to plead their case to limit those proposed cuts and ask for
more flexibility in structuring their budgets.
Huntington Beach Union High School District Supt. Susan Roper was one
of 14 Orange County superintendents to travel to Sacramento this month to
speak on behalf of county schools.
County superintendents converged in the capital city the same time
that state legislators were there for a special session.
“I think we were well received and we were pleased with our
presentation,” Roper said. “Right now, we’re waiting for what our
governor has to say regarding this matter.”
Last fall the governor proposed more than $800 million in reductions
to revenues that school districts have already allocated. In five area
school districts alone, Roper said, the impact would be widely felt.
The governor’s proposals could mean a shortfall in excess of $2.5
million -- money, she said, that has already been committed locally.
Revenue losses to the three school districts in Huntington Beach would
be devastating. Huntington Beach Union High School District stands to
lose $840,000; Huntington Beach City School District, $301,000; and Ocean View School District, $586,000.
In addition, she said, Fountain Valley School District would see a cut
of $375,000 and Westminster School District would have a loss of
$448,000.
With the school year half over, it is “difficult for school staff to
slash budgets that they have been working from all year.”
Ocean View School District’s Chief Financial Officer, Mary Lou
Beckmann agreed with Roper’s estimation of the situation.
While they understand and agree that public education cannot be
exempted from the budget cuts, Beckmann said, they feel the
recommendations from the legislative analyst’s office of cutting state
programs that have not yet gone into place would achieve savings without
undermining current year budgets.
“It is very difficult to cut $586,000 midyear from a budget that is
86% committed to salary and benefits, and where much of high ticket items
such as equipment and capital projects are spent in the first few months
of the fiscal year so that teachers and students get the benefits all
year long,” Beckmann concluded.
Roper said two main suggestions that county superintendents presented
in Sacramento were suspending or delaying new initiatives not yet
underway in their schools, and redirecting funds that are not likely to
be spent in the current year.
“Budget cuts this deep will most certainly impact school programs,”
she said. “Our job is to try to help make those cuts without damaging the
education of our kids.”
A couple suggestions from county officials would be suspending the
Governor’s Performance Award, saving $157 million; delay the Teaching as
a Priority block grant, saving $98.5 million; delay additional teacher
training in math and reading, which would save $80 million; suspend
certified staff performance awards, saving $50 million, and return unused
class size reductions funds, saving $60 million.
Edison students hit ground zero
Nearly 50 Model United Nations students from Edison High School headed
to New York City Wednesday night to visit to Ground Zero.
The students, accompanied by three social studies teachers and the
John Elliot, the assistant principal, will visit the viewing platform at
Ground Zero and volunteer their time on Feb. 4 at nearby Nino’s Cafe
where they will prepare meals and serve food to relief workers at the
site of the World Trade Center.
“It should be a spectacular experience for these kids,” said Elliot.
Edison’s Model United Nations students staged a fund-raising drive to
collect money to help provide food and services to those working at
Ground Zero. Through the efforts of Edison’s student body, staff and
parents, the students will be able to present Nino’s Cafe with a donation
check of approximately $8,000.
One of the key events the Model United Nations students will be
participating in is a three-day conference held at Yale University in New
Haven, Conn. There, various topics such as terrorism will be discussed,
and debate competitions featuring schools from across the nations will
take place.
Students will also visit Ellis Island to see the Statue of Liberty, an
off-Broadway play, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Central Park.
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