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10/17/11
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Letter to Columbus Square Residents
(survey closed 11/7/11)
Heritage School is located on the former Tustin
Marine Base (near Red Hill and Edinger avenues).
Heritage School Information
Over the past several years, the Tustin
Unified School District has worked hard
to bring a new school to the residents
living on the former Tustin Marine Corps
Air Station (the Base) property. We took
the necessary steps to acquire the
10-acre Heritage Elementary School site
from the federal government and have it
approved by the California Department of
Education, Department of Toxic Substance
Control and Department of State
Architect.
Heritage was designed to house
approximately 600 students. However, due
to the severe downturn in the economy
over the past several years, very few
residential units have been built at the
former marine base, and new residences
within the attendance area of the school
have only generated approximately 78 K-5
students. In order to offer a sound
educational program and successfully
maintain an elementary school, it would
be necessary for residential development
to increase to a typical level of at
least 350 to 400 students in kindergarten
through fifth grade, and to sustain
continuous growth.
Therefore, the opening of Heritage
School has been postponed; the duration
of the delay being contingent on future
residential development. As you can see,
opening Heritage at this time is not
academically or financially prudent.
Please be assured, we do look forward to
the opening of Heritage School in the
future.
In light of these facts, and to avoid
having Heritage School sit idle and be
subject to non-use and possible
vandalism, the District will utilize the
facility for alternative purposes on an
interim basis. This includes temporarily
relocating Hillview High School (behind
Foothill High) and Sycamore High School
(an independent study program near
Tustin High), to Heritage School, while
campus modernization projects at
Foothill and Tustin high schools, as
part of their Master Plans, take place.
In the meantime, the 78 K-5 students
from Columbus Square are now attending
other schools in the District.
The
elementary schools serving your area –
Barbara Benson and Marjorie Veeh –
continue to offer an excellent academic
program for children at Columbus Square.
Our Student Services Department, (714)
730-7301, ext. 317, may be contacted
regarding attendance at another school
in the Tustin Unified School District,
and will do their best to accommodate
such requests.
Please feel free to contact Mark Eliot,
TUSD Director of Communications and
Public Information, at (714) 730-7339
should you have further questions about
Heritage School, as well as the
temporary move of Hillview High and
Sycamore High to its campus.
Tustin Unified School District Tries to
Settle Dispute with City of Tustin, and
the City Files Another Lawsuit to
Interfere with Tustin School
Construction
Click
HERE for related
information.
Tustin, CA – August 16, 2011.
For the past six months, the Tustin
Unified School District has attempted to
settle all pending disputes with the
City of Tustin, and the City has refused
to discuss a settlement. Instead of
trying to find a way to minimize the
expense of litigation to Tustin’s
taxpayers through settlement, the City
has filed another lawsuit – its second –
against the District, which is solely
designed to interfere with the
District’s continuing efforts to
construct and renovate Tustin’s schools.
“This needless and costly lawsuit is
hardly conducive to promoting a
constructive dialogue between the City
and the District,” said TUSD Board
President Lynn Davis. “Instead of
another confrontational tactic by the
City, we should be looking for ways to
work together, resolve our differences
and do what’s right for kids, parents
and taxpayers.”
The City’s latest lawsuit against the
District relates to the temporary use of
Heritage Elementary School located on
the former Tustin marine base (Tustin
Legacy). For the past several years,
residential home development at Tustin
Legacy has stopped almost completely
because of the historic recession and a
controversial dispute between the City
and its master developer.
Despite the lack of development at
Tustin Legacy, the District was
nevertheless required to proceed with
construction of Heritage School or else
it would have to return the free land it
had obtained from the U.S. Department of
Education. The District also took
advantage of construction costs and
savings of 15 to 20 percent on the
project.
Currently, there are about 78 students
in kindergarten through fifth-grade who
live in the attendance area of Columbus
Square and are attending primarily
Benson and Marjorie Veeh elementary
schools. Heritage will be used as an
elementary school as soon as there are
enough students to fulfill the typical
start-up enrollment for a K-5 school of
approximately 300-350 students with
anticipated growth in the future to the
average District range of 550-600.
“Simply put, spending the excessive cost
to open the base school for so few
students would have meant larger class
sizes and fewer resources for every
other child in our district,” Davis
said. “Even the children at Heritage
would have been hurt by our need to
combine grades and limit their
educational options. Opening an
elementary school now is just not
prudent.”
Rather than have Heritage School remain
vacant, unused and subject to the risk
of vandalism, the District has decided
to use Heritage to house students and
staff from Hillview and Sycamore high
schools and 15 TUSD administrative
personnel on a temporary basis. This
decision will allow the District to
perform much needed renovations to
Hillview at a lower cost to taxpayers
because no temporary classrooms will be
needed to house the students and staff
during construction. The District will
also temporarily use Sycamore classrooms
for interim housing of Tustin High
School students. Assuming there are
sufficient students generated from
development at Tustin Legacy, Heritage
School will then be used as an
elementary school as originally planned.
“It is important to note that we are
using the school solely for educational
purposes and the relocation of these
programs are alternative uses of the
facility on an interim basis,” Davis
said.
Instead of acknowledging the facts
surrounding the troubled development at
Tustin Legacy, the City has decided to
spend more taxpayer money on an
expensive lawsuit to challenge the
District’s temporary use of Heritage
School. The City claims the District
failed to comply with the California
Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) because
it did not consider some minor parking
and traffic issues associated with the
temporary use. The City is seeking an
injunction to stop the District from
using Heritage School at all.
The temporary use of Heritage School is
exempt from the requirements imposed by
CEQA. The District nevertheless
responded to all the issues the City had
raised before the City filed its
lawsuit. The District asked the City not
to file the lawsuit, and instead “work
together” to resolve any remaining
concerns of the City. The City ignored
the District’s response and quickly
filed a lawsuit to interfere with the
District’s operation of its schools.
Even though Heritage is exempt from CEQA
compliance and no further environmental
analysis was required, the District took
additional steps and had an outside
independent source complete a traffic
report and an initial study out of an
abundance of caution to verify the
correctness of, and to provide further
technical analysis of the facts
supporting the notice of exemption. The
findings indicated that the project
would have “no significant impact” to
the community.
“The City’s latest lawsuit is another
disappointing turn for the District and
for Tustin’s taxpayers,” Davis said.
“Nevertheless, the District remains
committed to resolving all disputes with
the City, and welcomes an open dialogue
with City officials to achieve that
goal.”
An environmental analysis of the initial
study and other documents are posted on
the TUSD Web site at
www.tustin.k12.ca.us.
The full report is available at the
District Office, 300 South C St.,
Tustin. For more information, contact
the TUSD Communications Office at (714)
730-7339.
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