Citizen panel to oversee school repair funds
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- The school board tonight is expected to form an oversight
committee made up of local residents who will be charged with making sure
that any money designated for school repairs is spent properly, officials
said.
The need for a citizen committee of this kind has been recommended by
fiscal experts, taxpayer groups and community members alike.
Board members say the creation of the panel is the most important aspect
of the discussions on how to regulate the more than $160 million in
repairs needed for the district’s aging schools.
“It is really the key piece,” said school board member Wendy Leece. “For
me personally, the discussion and what we end up with is really important
because it will say to the voters ‘you can trust us because it will not
be school board members on the committee -- it will be citizens.”’
It is both an acknowledgment of the public’s blatant mistrust of the
district following the embezzlement and bankruptcy scandals of recent
years, and a safeguard that officials recognize as essential in order to
pass a bond.
District officials will present various recommendations to the board and
the public from the facilities committee as well as models used by other
school districts.
“We’re talking about the parameters of the committee -- how many people
will be on it and how they will be elected,” said board member Serene
Stokes.
The facilities committee’s recommendations include the creation of a
two-tiered citizens panel -- the idea being that there would be an
oversight committee for the whole district, then subcommittees at each
site.
Although thorough, the plan does draw the concerns of several school
board members who question the ability of such a large group to function
effectively.
“We just have a lot of questions about timing,” said school board
president Dana Black. “When do we start organizing? Do we strategize now?
There’s lots of questions that I have.”
Tonight’s will be the second of five study sessions. It will be an open
session and offers an opportunity for not only the board, but also the
public, to have their questions answered.
“I’m very much in favor. This is a key ingredient,” Black said. “As a
parent and community member, I’d want to see this so we don’t have to
deal with it again.”
FYI
The study session begins at 6 p.m. tonight in the board meeting room at
the District Education Center, 2985-A Bear St., Costa Mesa.
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