Park solution heads to home
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Hopes that the Little League field at Wardlow Park will be saved
rounded second earlier this month, though it still is an iffy bet
whether it will make it all the way home.
The park’s future has been in doubt since February, when the
Fountain Valley School District Board of Trustees decided to put
Wardlow Elementary School up for sale, along with two other surplus
campuses. The threat of the sale struck Little League officials
especially hard since they had just put in $300,000 in improvements.
They wasted little time in striking up opposition.
The difficulty, though, is not in opposing the plan but in finding
a solution. The district, rightly, wants to get top dollar for the
land. And the only logical bidder, if the park is going to remain
public, is the city, which is not flush with cash and in the past has
not been successful in persuading residents to pay for such purchases
via bond measures.
Now, though, there appears to be growing areas of potential
compromise between the district and the city that could save the
park. The district’s assistant superintendent of business, Barry
Blade, has said the district might be willing to give some of the
park to the city in exchange for a loosening of building requirements
that could raise the property’s value, estimated near $25 million.
And the Huntington Beach City Council last week at least suggested it
is interested in the property by unanimously voting to take a
procedural step under state education law that would give it first
rights to the property.
Both are welcome developments that seem headed for a perfect
solution in which the city gets the part of the land where the field
is, for a reasonable sum that doesn’t bust the bank. The school
district still gets its money. Little League keeps its field. And for
the kids, the hits keep coming.
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