EDITORIAL
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The time has come for a change in the Ocean View School District. All
the signs are there -- community members feeling left out of board
decisions, residents responding to school problems with vandalism and two
new trustees, one of whom is an ardent critic, elected to the school
board.
As we see it, Supt. James Tarwater needs to answer this clarion call
right away.
The old ways the school district and school board have handled issues
that adversely affect the students and residents of the community simply
are not working.
The first problem is clearly lack of communication between the school
district and the community.
It would seem the debacle and fight that erupted after the district
decided to sell off the closed Crest View school site to a Wal-Mart
department store would have been enough.
That action resulted in deep scars and embitterness within the Crest
View community and ultimately an ugly election campaign that dragged the
whole city into the mire.
Despite that turmoil, district officials continue to anger community
members.
Take for example, the construction of gymnasiums/auditoriums at the
district’s four middle schools. The district, under supervision of
Tarwater, started making plans to construct these facilities without any
input from the community.
This caused an uproar especially among those who live closest to the
middle schools. It took several months for the district to realize
residents should and will have a say in how these auditoriums are
constucted.
Just last week, community advisory committees were formed -- its
members chosen by fellow residents -- to work with the district on these
facilities.
Another problem is the noise and traffic disruptions associated with
the AYSO soccer fields on the former Meadow View Elementary School in
Huntington Beach.
Two months ago, soccer coaches found a large patch of dead, yellow
grass and soil where there had been more than 1 1/2 acres of a plush,
green, grassy soccer field. Most of the playing space was unusable.
While the fingers rightly pointed to residents in the area as the
cause of the destruction, it might have never happened if it weren’t for
the failure of the district, the owner of the property, to better
communicate with the residents in the area and the AYSO.
Now, the Huntington Beach Community Services Commission has stepped in
and formed an ad hoc committee to settle the ongoing dispute.
The panel, which includes commission members, Ocean View School
District officials, AYSO representatives and homeowners, has initially
requested additional police patrols of the area to help control traffic
and parking violations.
Neighbors have complained increased noise, speeding cars, congested
parking and blocked driveways on the weekends during game time.
Enough is enough.
It’s time the district and Tarwater put and end to this unneeded
friction and animosity. It’s time the district includes the community in
its plans and stops making decisions in a vacuum.
It may not be that hard to fix. Perhaps it’s as easy as hiring a
full-time community liaison, someone who can not only be the voice of the
district but the ears as well.
Either way, though, it has to be fixed because it seems that whenever
the community speaks up, it’s taking a long time for the district to
hear.
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