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Paul Clinton
A closer look at a list of proposed cuts to the Huntington Beach City
School District’s 2002-03 budget shows few hits to the district’s ability
to teach children.
Supt. Gary Rutherford publicly unveiled $1.1 million in cuts on May 7.
The board is scheduled to take up the proposal at its May 21 meeting.
The cuts, administrators said, are a result of Gov. Gray Davis having
slashed funding for schools as the state faces a $22-billion budget
deficit.
“We’ll have to give up our pound of flesh,” Rutherford said. “In
short, our revenue stream is going to be less than we projected.”
Of Rutherford’s 12 proposed cuts, only three will cause minor
headaches for teachers.
He has recommended reducing teaching positions, but no teachers would
lose their jobs. Instead of laying off teachers the district will not
fill vacant teaching positions or replace retiring teachers. District
officials also will not renew several temporary positions.
For its fourth-grade and fifth-grade classes, the district would move
to a ratio of 30-to-1. Kindergarten through third-grade classes would
move to a 20-to-1 ratio.
The district has been operating at lower ratios in recent years.
He has also recommended eliminating the so-called “discretionary”
funds handed to kindergarten, fourth-grade and fifth-grade programs.
In the past, schools have used those funds to hire classroom aides.
While they have enjoyed them in times of plenty, some principals said the
move wouldn’t hamper their instructional efforts.
“That was a nice luxury,” Perry Elementary School Principal Elaine
Keeley said. “But when I taught, we didn’t have any extra funds . . .
These cuts are far away from the instructional programs.”
Under Rutherford’s proposal, teachers would also lose their
reimbursements for out-of-pocket classroom expenses. The district was
providing up to $200 per school year.
Of all the cuts, about $840,000 can be counted as shifts in the way
resources are allocated. For example, Rutherford is proposing putting
$200,000 in lease revenue toward ongoing maintenance instead of dumping
it into the general fund.
The school leases out Burke School, which has been closed for more
than a decade, to the Huntington Christian School.
If the state’s budget crisis abates, Rutherford said he would send
funding back to these areas.
“My overall theme is we are planning for the worst and hoping for the
best,” Rutherford said. “If the news improves at the state level, we’ll
take a second look at restoring these programs.”
Golden West students given kudos, cash
Golden West College honored its best and brightest at the annual
awards ceremony on campus.
About 200 students who have achieved some measure of academic
excellence were handed $110,000 in scholarship money and some public
recognition.
The students were honored Tuesday at the school’s outdoor amphitheater
in front of more than 500 friends and family members. It was the 16th
annual scholarship and awards convocation.
The school has handed out $1.53 million in scholarship money since
1986.
The money will help students returning to Golden West in the fall or
continuing their studies at four-year universities. Some of the
scholarship money is also awarded to high school students planning to
attend Golden West.
A reception and student art exhibition followed the awards ceremony in
the college’s art gallery.
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