READERS RESPOND
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I sat on the Citizens Budget Advisory Council with Steve Smith for the
years 1997-1998 and 1998-1999. Smith’s attendance during 1997-1998 was
minimal. Out of 11 monthly meetings, he attended six. In 1998-1999, out
of 11 monthly meetings, he attended three and volunteered for no
subcommittee work.
Had Smith attended more meetings, in his first term he would have been
aware that the advisory council evaluated performance base budgeting and
zero base budgeting strategies. Studies were being done on subcommittees
concerning state funding, federal funding, salaries and facilities.
In the year 1998-1999, Smith attended three out of 11 meetings. There
the facilities committee expanded from the advisory council to a citizens
group drawing volunteers from all over the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District. These volunteers gathered information from the sites with the
help of an outside architect and the students and staff of each school.
Out of all of that research, came the observation that a bond may be
necessary.
Committees were established and research began. The advisory council
broke up into subcommittees and researched other districts and other
bonds. Smith’s help would have been welcomed had he come to the meetings.
Many hours in researching took place before the advisory board ever went
to the school board to advise the board of their findings.
A bit of history seems in order. It might be that Smith has lost sight
of how the advisory council came about as a group of concerned citizens.
Volunteer citizens researched the budget because they thought
discrepancies may be occurring. These citizens found embezzlement in the
making. Out of that travesty came the advisory council, the Citizens
Audit Committee, the Facilities Committee and now the Bond and Oversight
Committee. All different, caring individuals, who are willing to give
their time, even though they all have families and careers. Time given to
better our schools and to help improve the education of our children and
the betterment of our community’s future.
It is easy to sit back at a word processor and cast dispersion on a
bureaucratic institution. However, it is quite another thing to stand up
and volunteer your time to better that institution and to improve the
opportunities for all students, not just our own.
Smith sits in criticism and with some authority, yet he never bothered
to become a part of the process. That I find unfair and unjust. We have
an extraordinary community before us, one filled with many people
passionate about education. Is it so hard to become educated about this
process? Ignorance is the very foundation of prejudice. Would it not be
more responsible reporting if Smith chose to become involved whether he
agrees about this bond or not? Smith’s involvement would benefit many
more than those he stirs up with limited facts.
ANNIE YOUNGLOVE
Costa Mesa
Newport and Costa Mesa communities now face the single most important
community effort we have addressed in a long time -- the rebuilding of
our schools. Unfortunately, Steve Smith is bound and determined to
deprive the community of desperately needed school repairs.
Through his newspaper column, Smith is not just another voice in the
crowd. Smith has a microphone and he is turning the volume up louder with
every article. Smith doesn’t think the school board is capable of
handling the project. He doesn’t care that a community oversight
committee is in place to work with the board in implementing the project.
Smith doesn’t think enough planning has gone into the project, but he
doesn’t want to pay for design and implementation costs. Smith thinks the
school board should have saved $163 million and planned for maintenance
and rebuilding costs. He doesn’t care that there simply are no other
funds available for rebuilding schools. He doesn’t care that by passing
Measure A our district will qualify for $53 million in matching state
funds.
If Measure A fails, the state funds (our tax dollars) will go to other
districts to repair their schools. Smith doesn’t care that California
per-student spending has eroded year after year, leaving less and less
for in classroom instruction, and woefully inadequate budgets for capital
maintenance and improvements. Thirty years ago, California ranked in the
top 5 states in per-student spending. Today, even though California ranks
as one of the wealthiest states, we spend far less than the average state
on our students.
Smith doesn’t care that Measure A is our opportunity to provide the
very foundation of education equitably, to all students in the
Newport-Mesa community. He doesn’t care that there is no alternative.
Measure A is far from a perfect plan. We would all prefer to avoid
additional taxes. Unfortunately, we cannot afford the alternative.
Please, do not let Smith derail the rebuilding of our schools.
KIM PAWELL
Newport Beach
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