Home Ranch money distribution debated
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Lolita Harper
Parents, teachers, principals and residents packed the conference
room in City Hall on Tuesday for a chance to tell City Council
members what they think should be done with the $2 million from the
Home Ranch development agreement.
Council members invited the public to Tuesday’s study session so
they could get a better idea of how to disburse the $2-million
payment from the Segerstroms -- who own the 93-acre Home Ranch
development -- for educational purposes.
Speaker after speaker asked the City Council to consider two
separate foundations: one for Costa Mesa High School and another for
Estancia High and TeWinkle Middle schools. Each would receive $1
million to start their foundations according to an idea represented
during Home Ranch negotiations a year ago.
In July, the Segerstroms sent the city the $2 million, which has
since been sitting in an interest-bearing account while city
officials decide who will manage it.
After much deliberation, a committee that included Councilman Gary
Monahan and Councilwoman Karen Robinson recommended that the City
Council form a single, seven-member foundation to control the money.
Members of the foundation, governed by state open-meeting laws, would
include one City Council-appointed member, two community members, two
members from Costa Mesa High School, one from Estancia High School
and another from TeWinkle Middle School.
Tom Antol, Estancia’s principal, said the suggested foundation was
much too small and too general to truly understand and effectively
address the needs of the individual schools. Costa Mesa High School
officials, who serve grades 7 to 12, have different visions and goals
for their students than officials on the Westside of town, he said.
Robinson argued that the Estancia-appointed member should know the
needs of Estancia students and therefore be able to adequately
represent them. But Antol disagreed, saying it was too great a
responsibility to place on one person alone.
“You need people who are close to the students on site to truly
get an understanding,” Antol said.
Costa Mesa High School principal Fred Navarro agreed.
Navarro said the visions, needs, test scores and populations of
each school are too different to be governed by the same body. He
stressed a need for direct connection between the foundation members
and the schools they are serving.
“I make it a point not to make isolated decisions far away from
the classroom,” Navarro said, suggesting the same intimacy for the
foundations. “The closer you can get to where the money is going, the
better results you will have.”
Monahan said he knew coming into the meeting that the idea of a
single foundation was not the most popular.
“This is obviously not the easiest thing to put together, or we
would have had foundations a long time ago,” Monahan said.
Robinson stressed the importance of creating a governing
foundation that would have the entire city’s benefit in mind because
the money came at a high price to the residents.
“This is something that the citizens have gotten as the result of
the burden of this development,” Robinson said. “This is city money.”
Robin Leffler, a Mesa Verde resident who no longer has children in
the school system, was one of the few who agreed with the council’s
suggestions.
“I can see how one foundation might be more efficient,” Leffler
said. “I think that anyone that is community-minded and really cares
about these students will be fair-minded enough to think about the
benefits for the entire community.”
The formation of one or two educational foundations to manage the
Home Ranch money does not preclude any school or parent group from
starting an additional fund-raising foundation for that specific
school, she added.
The study session was designed to gather public input for a later
decision, so no vote was taken Tuesday. The subject will most likely
be on the Dec. 2 City Council agenda for a final vote, but officials
cannot confirm that date.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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