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Glendale Mayor Najarian vs School Board

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  • Glendale Mayor Najarian vs School Board

    Glendale News Press Community Forum March 20,2008

    COMMUNITY COMMENTARY: Glendale Mayor Najarian vs School Board
    City, schools must work together

    By Linda Guzik

    I am mad - really mad at the City Council's reaction to Glendale
    Unified School District Board President Greg Krikorian's call for
    greater cooperation between the board and council and his plea for
    assistance with a utility rebate (`City, school board don't agree on
    utilities,' Saturday).

    For Councilman Dave Weaver to deflect our school's budget issues on
    the governor and say `your quarrel is not with us' is the equivalent
    of him turning a blind eye to what's happening in our schools.

    It's true, the governor is the one proposing these devastating
    education cuts, but to have a City Council member shrug it off and
    effectively say, not our problem, is a true example of what is broken
    in this city.

    The financial reality facing our school system is everyone's problem.
    One of the main reasons people move to Glendale is because of its
    school system.

    It's a vital part of the city's infrastructure. If the school system
    collapses, so does our city and every taxpayer's property value. If
    that were to happen, there'd be no Rick Carusos building
    multibillion-dollar shopping venues here. So while you or many other
    Glendale citizens may not have children in the public school system,
    it's imperative you do not turn a blind eye.

    Sadly, our schools have been in a financial tailspin for decade. We
    are not just facing a `few years that are expected to be fiscally
    tight,' as Jim Starbird, our city manager, would have you believe. The
    fiscal tragedy that has befallen public schools in California has been
    going on for three decades.

    Before 1978 California had an enviable public school system and funded
    education at a level of $600 per student over the national average.

    Then Proposition 13 passed, capping local property taxes at 1%,
    sending our public schools into a financial downward spiral from which
    they've never recovered.

    Proposition 98 was later passed in an effort to help schools
    financially, but by 2001, California was funding education on a
    per-pupil basis of $1,075 below the national average.

    Year after year, this constant under-funding of education has eaten
    away at school budgets. There is no more fat to cut and now millions
    of California students are at risk. Teachers have become disheartened
    because they are being asked to do more every year, with fewer
    resources. The dropout rate has been rising, class sizes have bulged
    to over-flowing capacities; the `extras' like school librarians,
    counselors and nurses have vanished, and enrichment programs are
    either extinct or completely parent-funded and operated.

    So here we are, California public schools have hit rock bottom. We
    rank 50th in the U.S. for staff-to-student ratios and are 43rd in per
    pupil funding, providing $1,900 less per student than the national
    average.

    And now our schools are faced with potentially losing $4.8 billion
    more next year.

    How did we get to this bleak place? And, more importantly, what are we
    going to do about it? Our schools cannot continue to rely solely on
    state and federal funding. We need to start thinking creatively.
    Citizens and community and business leaders must join forces with City
    Council members, school board members, the Glendale Community College
    board and our teachers and administration to bring back the promise of
    a better future for our children.

    It is time to think outside of the box. We need to find ways to
    protect our own. We need to start considering making changes to the
    way we fund education, and yes, we need help from our city leaders.

    Is a utility break such a crazy thing to ask for? Why does our
    nonprofit public school system pay the same rates as say, the Rick
    Carusos of the world? That seems incredibly unfair when you consider
    how much more the public school system offers our city.

    Maybe Krikorian's request for a utility rebate seemed a little
    unusual, or out of the ordinary, but quite frankly desperate times
    require desperate measures. I implore our City Council members to
    listen to our school board.

    Don't belittle them with remarks like, `When Greg [Krikorian] makes
    these comments continually, we always scratch our heads and wonder
    what are the facts he's looking at.' How sad that comment came from
    our mayor and that he felt the need to embarrass Krikorian by
    insinuating his facts were sketchy and fabricated.

    We must put an end to the cantankerous relationship between our City
    Council and school board. All the nonsense, the hurt feelings, the
    stepping on each other's toes must stop now or we will never realize
    true success as a city.

    It's time to get rid of the `us versus them' mentality and together
    look to the future to find creative ways and new solutions that will
    ensure our school children have the brighter tomorrow they deserve.



    LINDA GUZIK is a Glendale resident.
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