Vote on Mariners library set
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- City Council members are expected to support a
Mariners joint-use library at Tuesday’s meeting, likely bringing to a
close an increasingly emotional debate.
A public hearing will give residents one last chance to weigh in on
the proposal before council members vote on whether to apply for state
funds to build the library.
The project, a library on the Mariners Elementary School campus that
will serve as the school’s library and as the new Mariners branch of the
public library, has been met with snowballing concern among some parents
who have worried that the project puts schoolchildren in danger by
exposing them to the general public.
Planners responded to these concerns by designating the school portion
of the library as closed to the public during school hours. Exceptions
are made for people who sign in with staff, which is the same guideline
now in place for allowing members of the public onto school campuses.
“I think it will be safer than most other public properties and most
school properties too,” City Manager Homer Bludau said, “because there is
a physical barrier between the public and the kids. Any adult who wants
to enter has to go through a screening process.”
The project cleared its first major hurdle Wednesday when supporters
announced they had met the deadline for raising $1 million. The council
vote on Tuesday will decide whether to apply to the state for the
remaining $2 million required to build the library. The state Proposition
14 funds up for grabs are earmarked for such joint-use projects.
“Joint-use facilities are here to stay,” said Mayor Tod Ridgeway,
citing studies by New Schools/Better Neighborhoods, a California
organization dedicated to educational and community improvement. “There
are hundreds of them, and there are going to be more.”
Though the state has more than $1 billion in requests for the $350
million in grants available, Newport Beach officials think they have a
good shot a getting a grant.
Bludau said the fact that the $1-million matching fund came from
private donations should give the city a competitive advantage.
“I think that’s a huge plus because it really shows a commitment on
the part of community for the facility,” Bludau said.
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