Leece leaves dais, remains defiant
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Deirdre Newman
As Wendy Leece stepped down from the school board dais Tuesday
night, she remained defiant in her independence, but regretted that
she couldn’t have made more of a difference in her eight years as a
trustee.
She was mainly thwarted, she said, by her war of ideology with the
teachers’ union and its alleged support of more government control,
less parental involvement and less freedom.
“The teachers’ union doesn’t want someone like me because I annoy
them with all my questions of ‘Does this work? Has it worked
before?’” Leece said. “Just because there’s money [for a certain
program] doesn’t mean we should do it. A lot of times, those programs
mean more jobs for teachers.”
Leece ran for the board in 1994 because she wanted to remove
educational practices she believed were ineffective, such as “whole
language” and “new math,” and restore basics like phonics. She also
wanted the Westside schools to improve so that Costa Mesa residents
who had fled these schools would return.
Leece expressed remorse that she was not totally successful in her
mission.
“I should have engaged more people to help me get involved in the
complicated public education system,” Leece said. “But most are so
busy. They are doing the best they can do. It’s difficult for them to
get involved. They expected me to represent them.”
Leece does have a lot to be proud of though, she said.
First and foremost is her run for a third term.
“I’m proud that I didn’t quit,” Leece said. “I stayed in there to
support conservative values and like-minded parents.”
Second is the district’s adoption of a character education program
that she said she repeatedly called for.
She is also proud of her work behind the scenes on behalf of
oversight controls for Measure A, the district’s facilities
improvement bond. And she wants those who accused her of not being a
team player to remember how she voted for the bond, even though she
had pledged no new taxes.
“When it came down to the fact, which no one appreciated, was ...
when it cost me votes, I did what my conscience thought was right,”
Leece said. “When I ran, I said ‘no new taxes’ and I meant that.” She
also wants to clear up some misconceptions that plagued her during
the election. One is that she didn’t put any of her kids in
Newport-Mesa public schools until this past election.
Not true, Leece said. At some point in time, all of her children
have attended Newport-Mesa schools.
Leece also resented that her opponents associated her with
conservatives in Orange that controlled a majority of the school
board.
“They’re my friends because they’re conservatives, but that was a
majority,” Leece said. “I’m one out of seven. ...To marginalize one
member because they can’t tolerate me, it doesn’t make sense in a
community like this.”
Leece said she is now looking forward to having more time to spend
with family and friends and volunteering with the Orange County Youth
Commission.
She said she would also be willing to work with the city of Costa
Mesa as a liaison on education-related issues, but has no intention
of running for City Council in 2004.
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