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Lynn Davis - Tustin School Board

Why Measure L is important to Tustin Schools

The Tustin Unified School District has long been regarded as one of California's best managed school districts. Student achievement is very high. These facts contribute greatly to excellent property values in our community.

Measure L is on the ballot to maintain the quality of Tustin's outstanding neighborhood schools and authorize facility improvements that keep property values high, attract and retain the best teachers, and help local children continue to soar in academic  achievement.

In 2002 local voters approved a bond measure to rehabilitate 20 of our oldest schools in Tustin. Since then neighborhood schools have been made safer and renovated on time and within budget, leveraging local funds to bring millions of dollars in state funding to reduce the cost of upgrades to local taxpayers.

But Tustin schools continue to age, and major areas of two of our high schools-Foothill and Tustin High Schools-remain deteriorated and outdated. Each day, thousands of Tustin students attend schools in buildings which are 45+ years old. Measure L will ensure that Tustin children have safe, modern school facilities with the technology needed to prepare for future jobs.

 Measure L will:

• Provide comprehensive facility upgrades at 45-year old Foothill High School, and Tustin High School, which has experienced only limited improvements since opening in 1921

• Upgrade educational technology in classrooms, labs, and school libraries

• Modernize science labs to meet advanced course requirements for college and university admission

• Replace deteriorated roofs, plumbing, lighting, heating, and electrical systems

• Rehabilitate outdated classrooms and school facilities for improved instruction

• Improve safety and security on school campuses

 ALL Measure L funds will stay in our community to benefit Tustin schools. 

Measure L REQUIRES accountability. NO funds can be used for administrators' salaries. Independent Citizens' Oversight and annual audits are MANDATORY to ensure funds are spent properly.  

Bond funds are NOT spent on regular maintenance, which is fully funded out of operating revenues each year.  Bond funds go only for lasting, permanent improvements that will benefit our community for decades into the future.

Our local schools are among the best in California.  To attract and retain quality teachers, provide technologies children need to prepare for future jobs, and keep students performing at the highest level, our facilities MUST be updated.   

These Measure L renovation projects are the most economical, prudent and responsible way to address our neighborhood school facility needs.  The longer we wait to make these needed renovations, the more expensive it will be.

 Measure L is supported by parents, teachers, senior citizens, community leaders, homeowners, business leaders and residents throughout the Tustin School District.  Great schools make for a great community and strong property values!

Please VOTE YES on L.


Which schools will benefit from Measure L?

The Tustin school district has newer state-of-the-art schools in Tustin Ranch and West Irvine, including Beckman High School and Pioneer Middle School.  These schools have been funded by local Mello Roos taxes on residents in those areas, which can cost homeowners many thousands of dollars a year.

Measure L is to renovate the older schools in the rest of the district so that they can provide an equal educational curriculum in the same manner as in these newer schools, at a cost to a homeowner with an assessed value of $400,000 of only $95 per year.

Thousands of students attend school every day in buildings that are 45 or more years old.

Measure L will be used to continue progress on the master plans for Foothill High School and Tustin High School, which will each get $32 million in Measure L funds.

$31 million will be used at Columbus Tustin, Currie, Hewes and Utt middle schools and the dozen elementary schools in the older part of the district on items such as supporting class size reduction and enabling equity in educational instruction as site feasibility and funding allow.

How well do Tustin Schools use our tax dollars?

TUSD engaged the widely respected firm School Services of California, Inc. to review the financial condition of the Tustin school district.  Here were some of their findings:

Tustin operates a “lean administrative model” at both school and district levels “in all measures of administrative staffing efficiency.”

Ten Tustin schools score top rating of “10” in statewide testing – all others are above average when compared to schools with similar populations.

“the District’s budget is on extremely firm ground, due to solid fiscal management and a conservative philosophy that gathered reserves during good times to help in tough times.”

Tustin is one of the few districts that did not have to consider elimination of class size reduction in dealing with this year’s state budget crisis, due to careful financial planning.

The quality of education provided by Tustin schools are among the best in the state, and many families buy homes in our neighborhoods so that their children can go to our high quality schools, which supports our home property values.

Doesn’t our state budget pay for school facilities?

The operating funds that California provides to our school district include only limited funds for ongoing maintenance.   The state budget does not fund building renovation of buildings which are 45+ years old in many cases, improvements required for newer science and technology education needs, or anything beyond simple repairs and maintenance.

What about Measure G?

Measure G funds have been spent and/or fully committed, along with millions of additional dollars that the school district was able to bring to our community from the state because we had Measure G funds available.  For detailed written reports on the use of Measure G funds, contact the Tustin Unified School District at (714) 730-7305.

Will bond money be used for regular maintenance?

Bond money cannot be used for regular maintenance, but only for lasting renovations and improvements to our schools.  TUSD fully funds regular maintenance out of its operating budget each year as provided by the state budget.

How long will the bond improvements last?

We expect that students will be using the new and renovated facilities, such as the new Science Centers at Foothill and Tustin High Schools, fifty years and more from now just as they are using buildings built fifty years ago every single day.  Bonds are generally paid off in twenty five years.

Doesn’t using bonds cost us more money in the long run?

With continued inflation expected in the costs of many raw materials due to the growing economies in China, India and elsewhere, we will spend less on interest than we would spend in higher costs if we waited.  Bonds will save us money in the long run, and our students and schools need improved facilities now.

How do we know that the money will be spent properly?

Measure L requires that there be an independent Citizens Oversight Committee to monitor the use of the funds to assure that money is spent as intended and that cost savings opportunities are pursued.  Annual audits are also required.

Past members of the Measure G Citizens Oversight Committee have given Tustin schools very positive reviews of its management of Measure G funds.  These Citizen Oversight Committee members have included architects, engineers, taxpayer advocates, accountants, city treasurer, senior citizens, and homeowners from all neighborhoods contributing to Measure G and Measure L.

Isn’t the City building a new library without bonds or taxes?

The city funded the new library with assessments on and/or  “contributions” from developers who hope to profit from being chosen to develop land on the former Tustin MCAS base.  Our school district has no such resources to lean upon to modernize school facilities for our older neighborhoods.

What does the high school site on the Tustin MCAS base have to do with Measure L?

Nothing.  Funding and building new schools on the base is a completely separate issue.

Measure L is about renovating and modernizing our older school sites that are many decades old in the most economical, responsible and prudent manner possible.  This needed modernization will cost a small fraction of the cost of new schools while providing students in our neighborhoods with educational equity in the delivery of school curriculum. 

Measure L is the right investment at the right time for our community!


Lynn Davis
Tustin School Board
Email: LynnDavis@LynnDavis.org
Copyright 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012  by Lynn Davis, all rights reserved
 

Leadership for Tustin Schools