COMMUNITY COMMENTARY
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Jim and Jan Garmon
We are opposed to the sale of the Balearic Park property for purposes of
real estate development. Our first choice is for the property to remain
with the Newport-Mesa Unified School District because it may well be
needed as a future school site, and once sold, it will be lost forever.
As the community population inevitably grows, space for additional school
classrooms will become increasingly difficult if not impossible to find.
If the only option open to the Newport-Mesa board is to sell the
property, then let negotiations begin immediately with the city of Costa
Mesa to purchase the property to retain it as a recreational park, since
for many years it has served well in that capacity.
There are other large issues. The Balearic property is an integral part
of its surrounding community of homes. It was a plus factor for those who
have chosen to buy homes and raise their families in the Mesa Verde
community. Residents did not buy their homes with the vision that
Balearic would eventually be covered over with more houses and streets,
more auto traffic, reduced safety and forever-lost space for adults and
children to enjoy.
It is simply not ethical nor in the best interests of the school district
or the community to open this land to development. Development would do
irreparable harm to quality of life as well as property values. That
these are not easy times for public education is an understatement. The
one-two punch of Prop. 13 and the Serrano-Priest bill are only two
factors among many which have narrowed the financial options and choices
of the school board and taken away much of local control.
At the January discussion meeting at the Balearic Center led by board
member David Brooks, it was clear that the residents of the Balearic
community don’t really want to hear a review of this sad legacy but
simply to know the bottom line. Additionally, over at least the recent
several years state legislation bills proposed to “fix” public education
in California seem to far outnumber any other single area of legislation.
It appears that almost everyone has an opinion about what is wrong with
public education and yet another remedy. The Newport-Mesa board,
administrators, teachers and staff are certainly to be commended for
their dedicated performance in the face of a steady stream of often
confusing, conflicting and ever-changing directives.
The board faces a tough choice, but should not yield to a short-term
quick fix. It should make every effort to save the Balearic property for
school or recreational use, which is the only rational option for the
best interests of the community in the long term.
* JIM and JAN GARMON are 35-year residents of the Mesa Verde area of
Costa Mesa.
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