BOB POLKOW -- Community Commentary
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The Independent on Dec. 9 ran two articles under Community Commentaries
concerning the property owned by the Ocean View School District (“Mixture
of government, business not a good recipe” and “What the district isn’t
saying about Wal-Mart deal”). Both articles deserve reading and
evaluation, as it is obvious they were coined by very learned
individuals.
Bruce Crawford, a Fountain Valley resident, compares the school
district’s decision on their property disposition to the cause of the
high employment rate in France. I must confess I have not kept abreast of
the employment rate in France, so I must take his word and his
comparison. It is difficult, though, to see the analogy of the actions of
the Ocean View School District to the financial status of a major foreign
country.
However, Crawford still earns my respect, and I certainly agree when he
states “the only workable and just solution is for the Ocean View School
District to sell the land to the highest bidder. Then let the new owner
decide how to best utilize its property.” But [there is] one small added
item to consider. Why should the school district sell the property so
somebody else can do exactly what they desire to do? All they want to do
is what Crawford believes is a just solution, how to best utilize their
property. I am at a loss for [a reason to] criticize the school district
for wanting to do exactly what [is] classified as a just solution. What
did I miss in this analysis?
The second article submitted was by Marvin Josephson and also deserves
close scrutiny, but I must warn readers who may at times feel dizzy to be
seated first.
Josephson’s article reminds me of a time when I was present during a
presentation being given to a three-star general in a prestigious branch
of the Air Force. The subject was the disposition of billions of dollars
our Congress had allocated to a project the general was charged with. The
presentation consisted of a series of bar charts, and every color of the
rainbow -- plus some colors I did not recognize -- had been added. As the
presenter went from chart to chart, I was totally confused and glanced at
the general for his reaction. As I was watching his face, it first turned
white, then red, and before he bellowed for a halt, his face was a deep
purple.
There is an axiom in the arena of preparing staff studies in large
industries that goes, “If you can’t convince them, confuse them.” The
presenter in this instance had underestimated the intelligence of his
audience. He was told to scrap his presentation material, and the general
turned to the presenter’s supervisor in the audience and instructed him
to find somebody who knew how to make a presentation containing no more
than three colors and who knew how to make an understandable
presentation.
Why do I relate this episode and tie it to Josephson’s article?
I am going to comply with the last sentence in Josephson’s article that
reads, “You do the math,” and suggest other readers do the same without a
myopic bias but with a projected view that takes into consideration the
long-term pros and cons.
* BOB POLKOW is a Huntington Beach resident.
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