The LookOut Letters to the Editor
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It Would Take a Mitzvah, Speaking for Frustrated Citizens and A Privilege not a Tax

January 20, 2004

Dear Editor,

Mayor Bloom is chair of a countywide task force on the homeless. Most likely the Task Force will conclude one of the problems contributing to the homeless situation is a lack of low-income housing.

Since Mayor Bloom refuses to build a second unit on his lot and rent it to a homeless person, and his allies on the SMRR politburo homeowners refuse to build a second unit on their lots and rent them to homeless people this is like putting the fox in charge of the chicken coop.

Most likely we'll see a recommendation for more of the same, i.e. increase the density in the multi-family zones and dump the homeless where Mayor Bloom and his allies don't live.

If Mayor Bloom recommends the City of Santa Monica amend the zoning code to comply with State law on so called "granny units" and he sets an example and actually builds a second unit on his lot for a homeless person, it would be a mitzvah or miracle. But the chances of Mayor Bloom being part of the solution on this issue are virtually nil.

Mathew Millen
Santa Monica


January 20, 2004

Dear Editor,

Thank you Jeff. (“OPINION: The Price of Being Dense,” January 20, 2004) You speak for many of the frustrated citizens of this community.

Sincerely,

Ron and Barbara O'Meara
Life Long Residents


January 18, 2004

Dear Editor,

The following is an Open Letter to the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District Board of Education:

We would like to add our voices to those of the many Santa Monica and Malibu citizens who have expressed support for Superintendent John Deasy's proposal to place 15 percent of gifts to individual schools in an equity fund to help schools throughout the Santa Monica Malibu Unified School District.

We have long been concerned about the inequality of private fundraising within the District because it exacerbates the already substantial opportunity and achievement gaps among children in our schools.

To address this problem, we became actively involved in the Santa Monica-Malibu Education Foundation (SMMEF) which helps schools throughout the District, Then, in 1993, when our youngest child was a student at Franklin Elementary School, we initiated a scrip sales fundraiser in which profits earned at Franklin were divided 50-50; 50 percent to the Franklin PTA and 50 percent to SMMEF.

Former Superintendent Neil Schmidt indicated that if our pilot program succeeded, he would ask the School Board to require some sort of gift revenue sharing at all schools. A group of very dedicated Franklin parents helped turn our fundraiser into a major source of revenue, raising approximately $90,000 over a two year period -- $45,000 for Franklin and $45,000 for SMMEF.

The Franklin parents who worked in and contributed to the program considered it a privilege, not a tax, even though only half the funds raised were spent at our own children's school. We also believed that our own children benefited from the model of caring and sharing set by their parents. However, due to pressure from those at other schools, the proposal to require district-wide sharing of privately raised funds was quietly dropped.

Since that time, the fundraising gap between more affluent and less affluent schools has widened. For example, we recently read that this year Point Dume Elementary School in Malibu raised eight times more per pupil than John Muir Elementary School in Santa Monica. (“Malibu Schools Leave Santa Monica’s Far Behind in Fundraising,” January 12, 2004)

As state funding cuts and budget shortfalls force the District to make once unimaginable cuts in school programming, the discrepancy between the educational offerings in different neighborhoods will become even more apparent unless the issue of fundraising inequality is addressed without further delay.

Our hope is that under the vibrant leadership of Superintendent Deasy and the current School Board, the equity concerns which were previously tabled will now be firmly addressed. We strongly believe that Superintendent Deasy's gift proposal is an important step in the effort to bridge the opportunity and achievement divides within our local public schools.

We urge the School Board to adopt the proposed gift policy at the earliest possible opportunity.


Very truly yours,

Sonya Fox Sultan Bruce Ira Sultan
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