Public pays for not falling through cracks...
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Public pays for not falling through cracks
I am surprised that your editorial, “Back to school and hopefully
more success,” on Sept. 10, treaded so lightly on the matter of the
rebuilding of Burbank’s schools. You politely referred to “challenges
of modernization, including costly planning and communication
missteps that fell through the cracks of bureaucracy.”
Granted every construction project has its glitches but major
errors -- like classrooms with no heat or air conditioning, flooding
at John Burroughs High School and the concrete leeching in the
parking lot at Burbank High -- are more than “missteps.” We, the
taxpayers of Burbank, trusted the prior School Board and the Bond
Oversight Committee to oversee these projects and the staff.
We were supposed to get the use of the Burbank High School library
and we didn’t. Somehow no one ever looked beyond the statement
“on-time and under-budget”. Well, when you don’t put in essential
items, that certainly should be “on-time and under-budget” because we
didn’t get what we were supposed to. Is the current school board
going back to contractors and possibly former staff members demanding
solutions?
We, the taxpayers of Burbank, agreed to pay for the school bond
for 30 years. We deserved to get what we paid for. Students’ needs
shouldn’t “fall through the cracks of bureaucracy.” We, the taxpayers
and the students of Burbank, shouldn’t be denied the final phases of
the modernization due to “communication missteps.” While your
editorial comments touched on the loss of vocational training at
Glendale College -- where is it in the high schools?
Not everyone is going to college. The world still needs plumbers,
woodworkers, etc. and because we expect the schools to do so much
with so little we won’t have them.
Where are they going to learn?
I applaud and commend all the staff that has had to go through
years of remodeling under grueling conditions. I respect a lot of the
administrators whose hearts and heads are in the right place -- the
students. But I can’t help but bemoan the inadequacies that caused
the “costly ... missteps” of the school modernization projects.
LYNNE GERRED
Burbank
Mover had a chance to make a difference
If Community Commentary writer Robby Shaw is happy to leave
Burbank, then I’m happy to see Shaw go (“Glad to be getting out of
Burbank,” Wednesday). Shaw complained about the growth, traffic,
buildings, construction and noise, but you live 12 miles away from
downtown Los Angeles. If I wanted nothing but peace and quiet, I
would live somewhere other than the second largest metropolitan area
in the United States.
Shaw also complained about Burbank politics and the current makeup
of the City Council but failed to note that we just had an election.
Burbank residents just reelected three City Council members. Perhaps
the voters know something that Shaw doesn’t? Maybe the rest of us
understand that Los Angeles is growing. According to the 2000 Census,
Northwest Los Angeles County’s population surged 49% from 1990-2000
and the San Fernando Valley grew an astonishing 93%. There has to be
growth in Burbank; there has to be development in order to handle
that kind of population growth. The question is how that growth is
managed. It needs to be balanced and well-planned and I think the
current City Council recognizes that. Does Shaw really think the
council regulars who attack every development, every new restaurant,
every new housing project, every plan no matter what the design
understand the reality of the situation?
The opinions Shaw and others espouse are so predictable it’s
almost funny. I remember at one meeting the proprietor of the Cold
Stone Creamery near the AMC theaters came up to the microphone after
the presentation of Phase II of the AMC project saying that he didn’t
know who or why anyone would object to the redesigned project, but I
knew exactly who would.
Then, as if on cue, one by one each of the council regulars came
up to state objections, over and over and over again. Each time
clapping and giving each other praise or childishly booing and
hissing those who disagreed. Well, now Shaw is leaving Burbank and is
happy about it. Well there’s another person that’s happy and that’s
me!
Good luck wherever Shaw goes.
ALFRED ABOULSAAD
Burbank
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