$365,000 just a start
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NEWPORT-MESA -- After years of planning and dreaming, a group of Costa
Mesa community members tonight will ask school district officials to
spend $365,000 to prepare working drawings to overhaul athletic
facilities at Costa Mesa and Estancia High Schools.
If approved, the money will pay an architect to develop plans for a
50-meter aquatic facility and 400-seat mini-stadium at Costa Mesa High
School, and a 2,500-seat athletic stadium at Estancia as well as a
complete overhaul of fields and courts at both schools.
The projects are expected to cost about $6 million, and community members
would have to raise the money to pay for them. To organize all this,
community members have set up a foundation to raise money.
Though the school district is cash-strapped at the moment, and grappling
with the problem of how to pay for $127 million in necessary repairs to
classrooms and office buildings, the money for the architect’s drawings
has already been appropriated. The board set aside the money for the
overhaul when the district sold off a farm site at Costa Mesa High School
two years ago.
The plans would also pay for an environmental report on the proposed
changes, to make sure stadium lights wouldn’t adversely affect residents
and deep holes wouldn’t disturb archeological sites near Fairview Park.
In their current formative phase, the plans already have coaches, parents
and students yearning for bright green fields and sparkling pool waters,
but quaking about how they are going to pay for them.
“Any improvements we can get are great,” said Galel Fajardo, a senior at
Costa Mesa High School.
But Galel himself probably won’t be around to see the improvements.
Foundation members won’t even start raising money until the architect
finishes the drawings -- about six months from now. Then it will take up
to another year to raise the money and start work.
The city of Costa Mesa, and possibly OCC, will contribute some money for
both building and maintenance because the community will benefit from the
pool as well.
Most of the money for the project, however, is expected to come from
grants and donations from local businesses.
“It’s something that needs to be done,” said Jim Scott Jr., a graduate of
Estancia High School who now works in Costa Mesa and is active in school
groups.
“It’s our turn,” said board member Jim Ferryman, who has also been active
on the foundation.
Ferryman noted that Corona del Mar High School has “an all-weather track
and the nicest swimming pool in the United States.” The money to build
those came from developer fees and from parents who raised it through a
booster club.
Unfortunately, said Ferryman, Costa Mesa parents aren’t able to donate
huge sums of money to their schools, and so raising money takes a while.
“It take a long time to get things done,” Galel said. “We have limited
funds, but we are at a distinct disadvantage to Newport Beach because
they can raise the money on their own, and we have to struggle to get
it.”
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