LETTER TO THE EDITOR
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A recent editorial in the Daily Pilot (“Generosity should extend
districtwide,” April 8) highlighted the efforts of the Newport Harbor
Educational Foundation to raise supplemental funds for Newport Harbor
High School. As the current president of the Foundation, I’m very proud
of the hard work performed by Foundation members. And as president, I
feel obliged to respond to the editorial. It is important to correct the
assumptions made by the editorial so the Foundation can continue to
receive the outstanding community support we currently enjoy.
Since 1996, the Foundation has consistently provided critical funds to
support several educational programs at Harbor High. This financial
assistance allows Principal Michael Vossen and his staff to provide the
kind of educational experience that has brought Harbor High national
recognition as a Blue Ribbon School. This is good news. And those of us
associated with Harbor High and the Foundation are proud of the school
and the local generous support highlighted in the original article in the
Daily Pilot.
Newport Harbor High School enjoys tremendous diversity, and the work
of the Foundation benefits all students at the school. The current
population of Harbor High is 2,115 students, by far the largest high
school in Newport-Mesa. Of that total, 53% reside in Costa Mesa. The
school is a microcosm of our community and of our society, and that is
part of what makes it special.
Apparently though, the Daily Pilot reads elitism into our fund-raising
efforts, playing on the concept of a wealthy community providing only for
its own and ignoring its neighbor.
The Daily Pilot acknowledges the positive efforts of the Foundation,
but laments the Foundation’s approach in raising funds that benefit only
one high school. The Daily Pilot proposes instead that the Foundation
“spread the wealth” and raise money for all the district’s high schools
(after taking “a little off the top” for Harbor High). The Daily Pilot
argues, “donors can do their part in providing the opportunity for
schools to become that much closer to equality, at least fiscally. Might
Newport Harbor still have a larger foundation budget than Estancia High
School? Unfortunately, yes. Might Estancia be better off than it was
before? Yes, and all for the better.”
Unfortunately, the editorial missed some very basic facts about
current funding in our own district. Those errors then became the basis
of the entire editorial. The Daily Pilot assumed Newport Harbor High
School and Estancia High School currently receive equal government
funding on a per-pupil basis, or maybe even that Harbor High is ahead in
funding support. Wrong. Here are the funding facts -- facts that have led
the Harbor High community to face up to the need to tap community
resources to make up a funding shortfall:
According to the district’s 2000-2001 all funds final budget, on a
per-student basis, a student at Harbor High was budgeted $2,945 from the
general fund for the current school year; a student at Estancia High was
budgeted $3,615 -- a difference of $670 per student. Add in the
categorical programs, and the Harbor High student received $3,507, while
the Estancia High student received $4,346 -- the difference grows to $839
per student.
Subtract out the one-time digital high school grant received this year
by Harbor High (and received in past years by Estancia High) and the
difference rises to about $1,000 more per student at Estancia High than
at Harbor High.
Let me be clear: the Foundation is not here today to challenge that
disparity, but we make no apologies for supporting academic enrichment at
our children’s school. Pride in local schools arises out of local
support. I can guarantee that to propose a compulsory sharing of
Foundation proceeds among all high schools would result in far fewer
funds being raised for any school. Such a proposal sounds like a tax to
me, not philanthropy. An effort to raise funds based on such a proposal
would have a negligible result in any community.Further, the Daily Pilot
misses a key educational trend. The role of the public school foundation
has grown in recent years in California as parents and community members
seek to improve the educational experience for all children. Newport
Harbor Educational Foundation is far from unique. There are, in fact,
many such foundations in existence throughout our school district, and in
fact many more elsewhere in California. All of them share the goal of
enhancing the educational experience for school children, given that
funding for public education in California has dropped to the point where
recently the state ranked 40th in per-pupil support in the U.S.
So what does the Newport Harbor Educational Foundation mean to Harbor
High? The roughly $400,000 raised by the Foundation this year will mean
about $190 per student -- an amount that makes a meaningful contribution
to each student’s educational experience at Harbor High. Good news
indeed.
The purpose of sharing the figures in this letter is to inform the
editorial staff of the Daily Pilot about these rather significant
financial facts. We hope that any future articles and editorials will be
based on the correct financial outlook faced by Harbor High each year. We
challenge the Daily Pilot to modify its stance, and to applaud and
advance the fund-raising efforts of our Foundation, as well as the other
foundations in existence in our district. All of them perform a local
service whose need and purpose will surely grow.
We will continue to seek financial support where we can find it. If
that support comes disproportionately from Newport Beach -- and benefits
all students attending Harbor High regardless of where they live -- so be
it. The Foundation’s goal is to enhance the educational experience for
all students at Harbor High. We’re proud of our record, and we invite
your support. Please contact our office at Newport Harbor High School if
you’d like to learn more about our Foundation, or if you’d like to help.
MARK SCHULTHEIS
Newport Beach
President, Newport Harbor Educational Foundation
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