Measure A funds put to work at schools
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Christine Carrillo
The concrete has been broken, holes have been dug and construction
workers, electricians and contractors have swarmed seven of 28
campuses within the school district as Measure A construction gets
underway.
Four Costa Mesa schools -- Woodland, Whittier and Kaiser
elementaries and Back Bay/Monte Vista High -- and three in Newport
Beach -- Mariners, Newport Heights and Harbor View Elementary, which
broke ground two weeks ago -- have finally stepped out of the world
of planning and into the world of construction, one that costs about
$21 million between them.
“We wanted to get to the ones we felt were the most in need of
repair ... but you have to ask yourself, ‘How many campuses do you
want to have disrupted simultaneously,’” said Tom Holtom, who
oversees Measure A construction for the district. “Our goal is to
have an equitable expenditure of money at all the campuses.”
Voters overwhelmingly approved the $110-million construction bond
in June 2000. The funds have been spread out and applied to the
neediest areas, the school board has noted at every meeting since
construction began.
“I’m glad that we’re publicly talking about the [funds] for
Measure A and where they’re going so we keep people abreast about
it,” said Trustee Serene Stokes, who pushed to make that happen. “I’m
so glad that we’re so far ahead of the game [compared with] other
school districts. ... We’re on our way.”
For nearly three years, plans for school improvements have been in
the works, and now, school officials and Newport-Mesa residents, many
of whom have participated in the site committees that help with
planning, have witnessed the work first-hand.
“As the principal, I’ve got to be like the chief cheerleader for
this,” said Kathryn Hofer, principal at Woodland Elementary.
“Communicating with the teachers and keeping them informed and
communicating with the parents and keeping them informed, along with
the site committee ... it really makes all the difference in the
world.”
While each of the sites pose problems that need to be addressed,
two of the major issues officials have faced are bringing the
bathrooms up to Americans with Disabilities Act regulations and
upgrading the classrooms to support computer technology.
Since many of the campuses were built more than 40 years ago --
none older than Newport Harbor High, which was built about 73 years
ago -- updating the facilities has proven one of the biggest
transformations. Understanding that classrooms must be able to
support a number of computers and electrical equipment, construction
at nearly every site needs more electrical power and electrical
outlets.
Eastbluff and Newport Coast elementary schools are the only two
sites within the district that will not receive any Measure A funds,
since both are up to code and are no more than 6 years old, Holtom
said.
“Things are progressing rather well,” he said. “But I like to
proceed with what I call ‘controlled paranoia.’”
Despite having a gnawing feeling that construction will unearth
unforeseen problems that might cause further delays, Holtom
anticipates that the seven sites under construction may be completed
by December.
The other level-one schools -- Ensign Intermediate and Costa Mesa
and Newport Harbor high schools -- will undergo construction through
priority four of seven.
Priority-one construction addresses health and safety issues at
each site. Construction will then move through priorities two, three
and four, which will include repairs and renovations to pathways,
restrooms, electrical systems, classrooms from ceilings to floors and
even fully equipped portable classrooms for student use in the
interim. Some renovations beyond priority four will be done to the
administrative offices and parking lots. Finally, the schools will
get campuswide paint jobs.
Ensign will go out for bid in early June and is expected to begin
construction in early summer, while Costa Mesa High School, the first
high school and the most complex of the level-one sites, is expected
to go out for bids by summer’s end.
Other sites within the district -- the level-two, -three and -four
schools -- will begin construction after work at the level-one
schools is completed.
“We’re really looking forward to it, even though it’s an
inconvenience,” Hofer said. “When we’re done, we’ll have a whole new
remodeled place. It really is worth it if you can just get through
it.”
* CHRISTINE CARRILLO covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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