Public can chime in on Home Ranch money
Lolita Harper
Council members are inviting public feedback Tuesday on what
exactly should be done with the $2 million for schools the city
negotiated in the Home Ranch agreement.
Councilman Gary Monahan and Councilwoman Karen Robinson -- who
both sat on a committee designed to suggest how the money should be
delegated -- introduced the public to preliminary ideas for the money
at last week’s City Council meeting and sparked some lively debate.
Monahan said he wanted to get the discussion started so it could
be further analyzed during Tuesday’s study session.
The Home Ranch development agreement, adopted last year, called
for the Segerstroms -- the family that owns the development site --
to give $2 million in a lump sum to Costa Mesa high schools and
middle schools when the first building permits for the project were
drawn. Costa Mesa High School, which serves those grades, would
receive $1 million, and Estancia High and TeWinkle Middle schools
would split the other $1 million, the agreement outlined.
After much deliberation, the committee recommended that the City
Council form a seven-member foundation to control the $2 million.
Members of the foundation, governed by state open-meeting laws, would
include one City Council-appointed member, two community members, two
members from Costa Mesa High School, one from Estancia High School
and another from TeWinkle Middle School.
Monahan explained that one foundation would eliminate a struggle
between the schools for the same community financial support.
“Two foundations would make it competitive,” Monahan said. “This
brings the community together and gets them working together. With
both at the same table, only the most important projects will get
done for the best of the entire community.”
Audience members at the meeting last week said they were surprised
only one foundation was being suggested. Many said they were under
the impression -- from Home Ranch discussions last fall -- that the
money was specifically designated by the Segerstroms to go to the
individual schools.
Resident Robert Graham said one government-controlled foundation
would only add to an attitude of disenfranchisement. Graham suggested
individual foundations would allow families to feel more connected to
the school’s betterment.
“This is not some big conglomerate,” Graham said. “Give these
schools some control over their own money.”
Robinson argued the money was not only about the schools but for
the enrichment of the entire community.
“This was started through the public and the city,” Robinson said.
“It is very important to keep the city’s interest at hand.”
Council members negotiated the development agreement, which makes
them the custodians of those funds and entitles them to place
conditions on the money, officials said.
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