Saturday, October 29, 2016


The Secret is Out - After connecting the dots, it appears Measure M is a Scheme to Funnel Free, Matching State Funds to Rancho Mission Viejo to Pay for Schools in that Community that the Rest of the CUSD Taxpayers Will Pay for Through the Measure M Tax to be Assessed on Properties for 35 Years.

 

·         The dollar amount of Measure M was dictated at the highest amount by the bond consultant CUSD hired.

 

·         The total dollar amount of Measure M, with interest, is $1.8 BILLION!

 

·         The Measure M tax is assessed against real property and personal property. This means secured and unsecured property such as homes, commercial property, mobile homes, boats, airplanes, improvements on real estate, and business property/fixtures like commercial ovens.

 

·         The Measure M tax will last for 35 years from the date the last bond is sold. (A current 7 year old first grader will be in his/her 50’s when Measure M is paid off, assuming CUSD doesn’t take any steps to extend the bond).

 

·         CUSD taxpayers are still paying off the Measure A bond that was passed in 1999.

 

·         Communities like Ladera & Talega will be tripled taxed if Measure M passes (ad valorem, Mello-Roos & "M").

 

·         CUSD wants to use Measure M to try to obtain up to $229 million in matching state funds that will be provided to CUSD free of charge.

 

·         Rancho Mission Viejo (“RMV”), the newest community in CUSD with the greatest need for schools (none have been built yet) was deliberately excluded from Measure M by CUSD. Senior communities like Costa del Sol (fixed incomes)  and Mello-Roos communities, ie. Ladera and Talega (already paying extra taxes via Mello-Roos) were not excluded.

 

·         Schools built with Ladera & Talega Mello-Roos are already heavily impacted by students from RMV.

 

·         Because RMV was excluded from Measure M, it does not have to pay any Measure M taxes if Measure M passes, but no Measure M funds can be used at or for RMV. However, RMV can receive and use any matching state funds CUSD obtains if Measure M is passed.

 

·         At a SC Times Coffee Chat hosted by CUSD Board President Amy Hanacek on October 21st, she stated that state matching funds obtained by CUSD (if Measure M passes) will be used at RMV though she said she cannot support building new schools when there is no money. She said the RMV Company is heavily backing Prop 51, the statewide school facilities bond ($9B state matching funds for school facilities), and CUSD's Measure M.

 

·         Under this, all of CUSD except RMW will pay Measure M taxes on their real property and personal property for 35 years if Measure M passes. RMV does not have to pay any Measure M taxes, yet it will get,  free of charge, matching state funds up to $229 million obtained by CUSD if Measure M passes.

 

·         Without Measure M there are no matching state funds for CUSD, and no matching state funds for RMV.

 

·         If a School Facilities Improvement District bond is ever formed in RMV, those taxpayer funds will only be able to be spent in the SFID, while the rest of CUSD taxpayer money is in a pot of funds to be shared district-wide.

 

·         Given the millions of free dollars RMV is in line to receive if Measure M passes, it is not surprising the rich and powerful landowner developing RMV is in favor of Measure M and Proposition 51.

 

·         CUSD does not need bond funds to access and spend State matching funds.  CUSD is using the lure of match to sell the Measure M to the community but can then use it on the schools in RMV (excluded from Measure M).

 

VOTE NO ON MEASURE M - There are over a Billion Reasons to do so.

Sunday, October 9, 2016


List of Endorsements
for November 8, 2016 Election
 


Mayor Bob Baker, City of San Clemente
Councilmember Lori Donchak, City of San Clemente
Councilmember Tim Brown, City of San Clemente
Mayor Pro Tem Kathy Ward, City of San Clemente
Greg Ward, Retired High School Teacher
Ret. Mayor (2012) Jim Evert, City of San Clemente
Assemblyman Bill Brough, Assembly District 73
Senator Pat Bates, Senate District 36
Board Trustee Linda Lindholm, Orange County Board of Education
Gloria Romero, Ret. State Senator/Chair of Senate Education Committee
The Republican Party of Orange County
The Lincoln Club of Orange County
The Orange County Charter Schools PAC
South Orange County Economic Coalition PAC (Econ PAC)
Vice President Jim Reardon, CUSD Board of Trustees
Mayor Frank Ury, City of Mission Viejo
Mayor Tony Beall, City of Rancho Santa Margarita
Mayor Mike Munzing, City of Aliso Viejo
Councilmember Brad McGirr, City of Rancho Santa Margarita
Mayor Pam Patterson, City of San Juan Capistrano
Ellen Addonizio, Former Trustee, Capistrano Unified School District
Wayne Eggleston, Ret. Mayor and Councilmember of San Clemente and Executive Director of The Heritage of San Clemente Foundation
The Orange County Register Editorial Board

President Andrea Ewell, Talega Maintenance Corporation HOA Board
 
Marc Veale
Susie Hatton
Laura Ginn
Debbie Flowers
Jason's Glass Tint
Amanda Earnest
Don and Bev Glasgow
Randy Goeken
Brenda Anderson
Eric Ettlin
Allison Singer
Joey Santley 
Mike and Linda Ray
Dawn Urbanek
Sofia Fligiel
Dawn Urbanek

Sharon Campbell

Jim Shaw

Stacy Reynolds

Barry Reynolds 


 
 Join the campaign by endorsing Laura Ferguson for
CUSD School Board, Trustee Area 3

Thursday, October 6, 2016

   
THIS IS NOT THE TIME FOR VOTER APATHY
Do your homework. There’s a lot at stake.

Voter apathy has been growing for years. If ever there was a time to get out the vote that time is now. I’ve grown tired of the status quo school board at Capistrano Unified School District. How about you?  I’ve attended meetings for 3 consecutive years, speaking out for the students, parents and taxpayers. I’m a grassroots candidate not beholden to any special interests. I have fought for the taxpayers and remedied major abuses alongside my fellow taxpayers in Talega despite CUSD fighting against us. I have mobilized parents for school choice efforts that are not easy to do considering the anti-school choice climate of the current school board.
 
My opponent Ms. Holloway, who is backed and funded by the teacher’s union has been absent on the campaign trail, not engaged in CUSD issues and absent from school board meetings too. She has been involved in protecting trees in San Clemente through her foundation, not CUSD education and taxpayer issues. Trees are a noble cause, but our district has serious issues to tend to such as declining student enrollment (400 less kids this fiscal year), low math and ELA test scores, low four-year college readiness rates of 53% (should students choose this path), neglect of deferred facilities maintenance for 15+ years, and more. If you elect me, you will get an informed, passionate parent who has followed these issues, and who will be accountable to you, will bring fresh ideas and conservative fiscal leadership and who will value parents’ rights and education choices.
If you elect my opponent, you get the status quo who is running because the teacher’s union talked her into it last minute since they had no candidate and did not want me to run unchallenged.  After the August 30th CUSD school board special meeting, Trustee Gila Jones came over to chat with me and my friends and in our conversation I asked her what made my opponent want to run for school board. Her response was that they were friends and she had applied for a vacant seat on the school board years ago. She did not get the appointment. Make no bones about it, my opponent will uphold the union’s agenda and what that means is the students will not be first priority. My opponent also supports the billion dollar bond.  

Another reason why new board leadership is necessary is the lack of sincere communication with the public. In order to build a partnership with parents and students, CUSD has to be honest and trustworthy. Just look at how CUSD currently communicates with its communities:
 
We are told by CUSD that it is the #1 performing school district in the state, when the school district, in recent years ranked around #40 out of all school districts statewide. Still not bad considering there are 900 school districts, but CUSD is not #1.
 
We are told the tax on the ballot is $889 million when it’s really going to cost taxpayers $1.8 billion.  CUSD also is not telling us that after the barrage of consultants get their fees and all the interest is paid, brick and mortar schools will only get about $500 million of this money. We will be bearing the consequences of this mega bond for 35 years, as will our children.
We are told that all schools are going to get something when some schools, possibly even many schools will get nothing at all but we will all pay the price for 35 years. Mello-Roos communities which are still paying on multiple bonds and have 15+ years before paying these off will be triple taxed and with the newer schools, will get nothing.
We are told CUSD wants to engage the community when instead they handpick agreeable people to serve on the district’s token committees, shame parents who speak out for school choice and submit charter applications, publicly berate parents who catch a board member doing something contrary to the law, threaten to sue elected officials who disagree with the board’s views and positions, and hire consultants and lawyers to fight the taxpayers when those very taxpayers discover the district hoarding and misspending millions in taxpayer dollars.

This behavior is killing the performance of our district. It is damaging the image of our district. We now have a district that shows a refusal to engage in the process of governing in the best interest of the people, and refuses to actively seek out participants in their issues so we cannot ensure that decisions are made in the best interest of the students and taxpayers who reside in the 7 cities and unincorporated communities they are elected to serve.
We want the best people to win but often we are all too busy to educate ourselves on the issues or research who is behind the candidates who are running for office. Voters should pay attention during election years—and, especially this year with billions in new tax increases on this ballot. Take some time to read and educate yourself on the issues and the candidates and only then can we ever forge real change.  The status quo has to go. We can do better!











Sunday, October 2, 2016


 IT IS TIME TO RID OF THE CHRONIC MISMANAGEMENT AT CUSD

Vote In New School Board Members Who Will Put The Students And Taxpayers First

 It is time all of the communities in CUSD come together and vote for school board members who prioritize student learning, are fiscally responsible with taxpayer dollars, and continuously look for ways to involve parent and taxpayers in identifying the district's vision and priorities. 

Ask yourself, how does your school board member measure up?  All but Vice President/CUSD Trustee Jim Reardon voted to place the union's choice for a $1.8 billion tax on the ballot without any community outreach or any reasonable or exhaustive effort to truly be specific about the projects needed.  The board had initially considered smaller, more manageable bonds by area at the first couple of  meetings I attended on this subject this summer. And, now that the big mega bond is officially on the ballot, the district is not even trying to be transparent with the community on how much this bond will cost taxpayers or how long this 35+ year tax will last on its consultant-crafted bond marketing materials on display at all CUSD schools.  

The boards of CUSD PTSAs have even come out in support of this bond, behaving like activists for the union.  Their positions of this political nature should require a vote of its membership. I would bet they would not be passing resolutions supporting this mega bond.  I wonder too, if as a non-profit fundraising organization, if they should even be taking a position at all?  Regardless, their support is not a unified position without membership input, although no different from the current CUSD board who makes decisions without notifying or engaging the community. The district's push pull survey it conducted on this bond does not count.  It was not a legitimate survey as it was purely political and crafted to create a desired outcome for the district.

Rather than function responsibly and show an effort to get its own fiscal house in order, CUSD instead cries for more tax money. Did you know already more than half of every property tax dollar we pay goes to fund education? Did you know San Clemente property taxpayers send more than $50 million to CUSD every year? It is clear San Clemente has not been well represented on this school board and if you vote for the union endorsed candidate you will get more of the same neglect. It is time to rid of the chronic mismanagement and lack of concern for the taxpaying public and vote in a new school board majority who are not beholden to special interests.  Visit the pages of these student-centered, taxpayer friendly candidates to follow and support their campaigns. "Like" them on Facebook too.

https://www.facebook.com/laurafergusonforcusd/

 https://www.facebook.com/WendyShroveForCUSD/?fref=ts

https://www.facebook.com/jakefortrustee/?fref=ts

http://www.votereardon.com/