District officials face barrage of questions
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Jessica Garrison
NEWPORT-MESA -- District officials were hammered relentlessly Thursday
night. And that is just how they wanted it.
At the second meeting of the district’s Facilities Advisory Committee,
the group of local business and community leaders convened by Supt.
Robert Barbot to figure out what to do about the district’s crumbling
classrooms peppered officials with one tough question after another.
Last month, district officials estimated that the total cost to repair
and modernize schools will be at least $127 million, money the
cash-strapped district does not have. Options include selling district
property, applying for state funds and asking voters to approve a school
bond.
The committee has until Sept. 28 to tell the school board what they think
should be done. But before they decide what to do, committee members
wanted to make sure they agreed with district officials about the scope
of the problem.
* Had the district’s facilities consultant properly factored in the
amount of money it would cost to make classrooms earthquake safe, one
wanted to know.
* Why were district officials planning to install carpeting in all
elementary school classrooms? What if a kindergartner vomited on the
floor? Had the costs of cleaning up such inevitable accidents, and
combating the bacteria they would cause, been properly considered?
* Had district officials accurately estimated how much money the state
would give the district, if the state is indeed willing to give any money
at all?
Barbot, along with board member Wendy Leece, Assistant Superintendent for
Financial Services Mike Fine and the district’s facilities’ consultant
Fred Good, sat stone-faced as the questions came down on them. They
politely answered each one and even engaged in a 10-minute debate about
vomit-repellent characteristics of many modern carpet fibers for
elementary schools.
Fine said he was pleased with the way the meeting had gone.
“That is exactly what the committee’s purpose is” Fine said -- to
validate and verify the district’s plan. “I thought it went very well.”
Rush Hill, a prominent architect and father of two Newport Harbor High
School students, said his pointed interrogation of district officials
does not mean he thinks there is anything wrong with their monetary
estimates.
“It’s the natural reaction of individuals as it relates to government,
and especially government in Orange County and Newport Beach,” he said,
ticking off the county’s bankruptcy and the embezzlements in Newport
Beach and the school district. “This is the only process you can go
through.”
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