Pirates escort helpful parents
Alicia Robinson
With his eye patch, gold-hoop earring and tri-corner hat, Mike
Stevens would have made a convincing pirate -- except he was piloting
an electric boat instead of a sailing ship.
Dressed in his swashbuckling finest, Stevens spent Saturday
afternoon ferrying parents of Lincoln Elementary School students to
Newport Beach waterfront restaurants to thank them for helping raise
money for the school.
“How do girls wear earrings? This thing is killing me!” Stevens
jovially complained after getting behind the wheel of one of six
vessels Duffy Electric Boats provided for the event.
Guests at the floating party were made up of about 50 parents who
donated a total of $35,000 toward supplemental programs at Lincoln
Elementary School in Corona del Mar. About $80,000 more is expected
from a fundraising dinner and auction set for Friday at the Balboa
Bay Club.
The money pays for tangible learning tools -- classroom supplies
and computers -- and the conduits of education themselves, teachers.
For example, the school district provides physical education for
fourth- through sixth-grade students, but parental fundraising pays
for a gym teacher for the rest of the students.
“It’s almost like having your child in a private school,” said
Laura Stevens, the wife of the earringed boat captain. The couple has
a daughter in first grade at the school.
On Saturday, guests enjoyed a boat ride from Duffy’s dock to the
Harborside Restaurant on the Balboa Peninsula and then the Cannery
restaurant in the Rhine Channel, where they ate, drank and
socialized.
Parent volunteers have been raising extra money for the school for
some time, but the fundraising has taken off over the last five
years, said Liz Kennedy, president of the school’s PTA.
“Every year it gets larger, because the funding that we get from
the state every year decreases,” she said. “This community is so
generous. They really support the school in a big way.”
That help has been invaluable for giving the students the best
education possible, said Lincoln Elementary Principal Jane Holm, who
was reached at the school Friday.
“We have all kinds of enrichments and specialized programs and
teachers that they pay for,” Holm said. “Without the funds from the
parents ... we’d certainly cover core content and the stuff we need
to cover, but they just provide so many enriching experiences for our
kids.”
Kennedy noted that Lincoln has been named a blue ribbon school --
a federal recognition of academic excellence. Other parents at
Saturday’s party said the secret to the school’s success is the
parents devoting their time to it.
“We love Lincoln,” said Laura Stevens. “In fact, everybody here is
heavily involved with the school.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
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