Clear of the dust
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Deirdre Newman
While the first day of school is always exciting for kindergarteners,
there was a tinge more anticipation in Carrie Holland’s classroom at
Newport Heights Elementary School on Tuesday morning.
All the students were decked out in Hawaiian leis to help them
learn the name of fellow student Leilani Gutierrez, who was rendered
a quadriplegic in a car accident last year.
When principal Judith Chambers addressed the class to explain
Leilani’s situation, Leilani took the initiative to talk to her peers
herself. The poised, articulate 5-year-old talked about the
ventilator she uses to breath and what it’s like to be paralyzed.
“She’s a really strong, independent person,” said mom June
Gutierrez. “She doesn’t have a problem at all talking about her
accident.”
Leilani’s smooth transition exemplified the ease that the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District ushered in its first day of
school. The effortlessness was a marked contrast to the frenzied
activity that swirled around the seven campuses under construction in
the past few weeks.
These schools are the first in the district-wide facility
improvement program, funded by Measure A, to succumb to the drills
and jackhammers. Only Harbor View Elementary School in Newport Beach
fell victim to severe problems, which delayed its opening by four
days.
“The first day of school went extremely smoothly at all of our
sites and we’re expecting next Monday to open Harbor View as
expeditiously as it went today,” said Jane Garland, district
spokesperson. “The district staff was out at all the sites helping to
open them and we couldn’t be more pleased.”
At Whittier Elementary School in Costa Mesa, one of the seven
schools under construction, Principal Sharon Blakely characterized
the first day of school as the “best ever,” considering the
continuing construction.
“The construction people were appropriate and did their things,”
Blakely said, explaining that the construction area is fenced and
covered with a green tarp to keep it isolated from the student area.
Second-grade teacher Jennifer Lorenzo is already in a new
classroom. She said she is especially enamored of the 16 new shelves
tucked into the wall that enable her to stash away supplies that are
usually strewn all over the room.
“I think it’s nice to have a place for everything,” Lorenzo said.
“It doesn’t seem cluttered.”
Blakely gave credit to project manager Bruce Cox of McCarthy
Building Co. for helping facilitate the smooth opening.
“He is a remarkable communicator and that’s what it’s all about,”
Blakely said. “We are a team. That patience and one helping another
has extended through Measure A.”
Cox even pitched in to create some makeshift bathroom doors, using
rods and curtains, for the kindergarten rooms when they were not
installed on time.
At Newport Heights, which is also under construction, Principal
Judith Chambers was impressed with the sudden transformation.
“Looking at this campus in the last few weeks and now, it’s
fabulous,” Chambers said. “It exceeded our expectations. Everyone
worked together -- the teachers, the parents and the district.”
Sixth-grader David Malo, 11, said the first day was just like any
other.
“It went really well,” David said. “Everything was normal.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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