Surf legend caught in budget riptide
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It was last July, just before he took the Huntington Beach High
School Surf team on its annual safari to an exotic location, that
Andy Verdone stood like the Duke himself, carving a soulful image of
humility. The lineup on Main Street was a parade of surfing legends
who praised the impact this man has had on the young people of
Huntington Beach over the years.
His family and friends were there, hundreds who have surfed for
him, and with him. Now, he was being honored with a plaque, right
there on the sidewalk as part of Surf City’s Walk of Fame. Within the
year, he would also become a prominent part of the display across the
street at Huntington Surf & Sport.
Andy seemed in humble disbelief that his 30 years of work with
Huntington Beach High School students were so appreciated.
Less than one year later his disbelief is replaced by shock. Is he
appreciated after all? Thanks to the state’s fiscal crisis, Verdone
might see his teaching job at Huntington High go over the falls with
budget cuts.
This is not the story of a dead-weight jock coach who doesn’t pull
his own weight in the academic world. This is the story of a man who
has risen before dawn year-round for nearly three decades to provide
leadership and guidance, teaching surfing to the hundreds of young
men and women who have taken part in the Huntington Beach High School
surf team. A non-CIF program, the surf team has no booster club, no
massive budget, just Andy and his volunteer assistants who have
worked with him over the years. And he does not turn would-be surfers
away, meaning some mornings he is responsible for more than a 100
young men and women before they go to school.
Then he goes to school, Huntington Beach High School, where
Verdone teaches special education. The challenges in the modern
classroom are great, but you’ll be hard-pressed to find an educator
who doesn’t hold special ed teachers in the highest regard. They are
the ones who must try to reach the seemingly unreachable student with
emotional and educational challenges. They are the teachers who must
show the greatest patience. They are the ones whose parents and
families often come to school with little hope of seeing their child
grow intellectually.
Only 41, Verdone is not some grizzled veteran hanging on until
retirement. And truth be told, Verdone’s job is not in jeopardy
because he is a surfer. It is in jeopardy because not enough
politicians are. In a time in American history when education is
being overlooked to the point of national crisis, California is faced
with severe budgetary decisions. A federal government willing to
spend a couple hundred dollars -- oops, a couple hundred billion
dollars -- to secure the freedom of people with oil halfway around
the globe, is content to leave the question of educating America’s
future in the hands of states ill-equipped to know where their energy
comes from, much less where not to cut their budgets.
So teachers are losing their jobs. Verdone is among those with the
longest tenure in special ed at Huntington Beach High School, and
although he completed his dissertation last summer and is set to
receive his doctorate in special education, he’s looking for work.
Verdone’s job could be saved, or he could be transferred to another
school. It is difficult to see why education would make a plausible
career when those with Verdone’s credentials are faced with such a
lack of job security.
Soon, he will be Dr. Verdone. Yes, he’ll likely be called doctor
of surfology or some other such name by his friends, but that title
he already has earned. There are life lessons on those waves, and
Andy Verdone has handed those lessons down by the thousands. Lessons
like compassion and respect, persistence and accountability.
Funny thing; surfers used to be considered the slackers of the
bunch, you know, “You can surf all you want, son, but there’s no
future there for ya. You’ll still have to get a real job.” But walk
down Main Street and notice the handprints and footprints embedded
there, read the names carved there; you’ll see the name of at least
one man who’s done everything to make himself the best teacher he can
be and that’s why he belongs.
We as a community are speaking loud and clear; we can not afford
to let teachers like Andy Verdone go. Try and imagine where those
students might have gone, how many might have wandered. How many
young people lost if not for a man who showed them the way in the
classroom ... and in the ocean. He is a teacher, he is our teacher,
and we need him now more than ever.
Hopefully, Andy Verdone won’t find, in the end, that the waves
provided more stability than a so-called real job might have after
all.
* BRENT WEBER is a Huntington Beach resident. To contribute to
“sounding Off” e-mail us at [email protected] or fax us at (714)
965-7174.
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