School board gives OK to spend money on sketches
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Jessica Garrison
NEWPORT-MESA -- Let the drawing begin!
School board members Tuesday voted to spend $365,000 to prepare drawings
to overhaul athletic facilities at Costa Mesa and Estancia high schools.
The money, which was set aside from the proceeds of the sale of the
district’s farm, will go to pay an architect to develop plans for a
50-meter aquatic facility and a 400-seat mini-auditorium 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 board also voted to pay for an environmental report on the proposed
projects to make sure stadium lights don’t bother residents and deep
holes won’t displace old artifacts.
The total cost to build the sports complex is expected to be about $6
million, and community members will now have to raise that money. The
school district is struggling to figure out how to pay for $127 million
in repairs to classrooms and office buildings.
Jim Scott Jr. -- who with his father, Jim Scott, and a number of other
community members has started a foundation to raise the money -- said he
was “tremendously excited” about the board’s vote.
“I’m very pleased, and I was very impressed by the statements of the
board,” he said, adding that the project stirred up a lot of enthusiasm
around Costa Mesa, and also led to the formation of Eagle Pride, a
foundation dedicated to raising the profile of the schools in the
Estancia zone.
In other school district matter:
* Parents and teachers at Whittier Elementary School were crushed to
learn the state did not award them grant money to open an additional
preschool program, said preschool teacher Gladys Green. The preschool,
which opened one class in February at Whittier school to help low-income
children get a head start on school, has a 50-student waiting list. Green
said she planned to appeal the decision and, failing that, to reapply
next year.
“It’s so frustrating,” she said. “I know we can make a difference.”
She added that district officials, so sure of getting the grant, had
prepared a classroom and gotten everything ready. They are in the process
of calling all the parents on the waiting list and helping them find
other child-care options.
* Mike Fine, the district’s head of business services, gave board members
an update on all the district’s special funds, which, along with the
mammoth general fund, make up the budget. Board members will vote on a
final budget at a special meeting Sept. 7.
A great deal of new money for schools will be coming from Sacramento,
Fine said, but it is coming in dramatically different forms than it did
last year, and with many restrictions on how it can be spent. Fine said
he wants individual schools to continue to have control over funds, but
this will require extra work on the part of school principals and staff
members to understand how the budget works.
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