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The Rotary Club of Huntington Beach and the Huntington Beach Sunrise
Rotary Club staged a recent drive to help fill the library shelves at Oak
View Elementary School.
Their hope was to put books in the hands of children in kindergarten
through third grade and have them all reading by the age of nine.
With a goal of attaining 2,000 books for the Oak View students, the
two rotary clubs went to work, asking the public to contribute to the
cause.
They exceeded their goal.
“We are ecstatic with the outcome of this drive,” said Dale Dunn of
the Rotary Club of Huntington Beach, which was established in 1923.
Both clubs gave $1,500 to the cause, and with the public’s help, the
drive collected a total of $3,467. That led to the purchase of 2,350
books, which were recently ordered.
He said that the school’s book shelves should be filled by late March
or early April.
The program is based on the Reading by 9 program, a Southern
California literacy initiative, started by the Los Angeles Times, that
puts books in the hands of children and brings adult volunteers into
classrooms to read with students one on one.
Moldy classrooms and just what is being done about them has been
foremost in parents minds in the Huntington Beach City School District.
The district held a special meeting last week at the Eader Elementary
School to assure parents that things are under control.
The district hired Assets Environmental Group to address the problem.
The group’s spokeswoman, Jeanna Sellmeyer, reported to a crowd of about
75 people that abatement work is ongoing at Eader and vowed to kept
district officials, school personneland concerned parents abreast of the
progress being made at the school site.
Currently, four active classrooms are shutdown at Eader. One classroom
not in use has mold infestation, said Dick Masters, the district’s
maintenance and operations supervisor.
“We began having problems last April, they came in and took care of
that problem, and then two more schools were found to have mold in some
of their classrooms,” Masters said.
The first school infested with mold, Masters said, was Kettler
Elementary last April and the school received aggressive mold abatement
treatments and the problem has been solved.
Mold was also discovered in five rooms at Perry Elementary School in
late September, and the rooms were stripped and gutted and put back
together when treatment was completed, Masters said.
Three rooms at Smith Elementary School have had mold infestation and
although some treatments have already been completed, abatement
treatments in those three rooms is now in a holding pattern.
“We are aggressively tackling these problems,” Masters said.
Eader Principal Dixie Arnold said the next informational meeting will
be held Friday before the start of the school day at the school’s
cafeteria.
Students give ideas for new laws
Edison High School junior Travis Jensen was recognized for his entry
in the essay contest, “There Ought To Be A Law,” which was sponsored by
Assemblyman Tom Harman (R-Huntington Beach).
Jensen was one of four semifinalists chosen by a panel of community
leaders. His essay proposed to combat child abuse using alcohol taxes.
His idea will be molded into a bill and introduced by Harman, said his
chief of staff Bob Biddle.
The three other semifinalists were Brad Stapleton and Harold Wong,
both of Huntington Beach, and Stephanie Antal of Fountain Valley.
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