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PUSD DISTRICT 6 RACE AND MOREPUSD DISTRICT 6 RACE AND MORE
Mountain Views-News Saturday, October 12, 2024
YES ON MEASURE R + MEASURE EE MEANS YES
TO GREENER COOLER PUSD SCHOOLS
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
By Tina Wu Fredericks, PUSD District 6
Representative
I humbly ask for your vote YES on Measure R
and Measure EE to prioritize our public schools
this November 2024. Investing in today’s
children means many generations return on
investment. This month we witnessed the death
and devastation of families and communities
caused by Hurricane Helene and Hurricane
Milton throughout our nation’s southern states,
underscoring the importance of preparing
for the extreme weather conditions caused by
climate change.
At the other extreme, our communities in
southern California have experienced record
high temperatures, longer and dryer summers in
recent years. Extreme heat creates increasingly
hazardous conditions in outdoor areas and
structures where the 14,000 students of our
district learn and play. Even the California
legislature is taking the extreme heat conditions
seriously. On October 1, 2024, California passed
Senate Bill 1248, a bill requiring local schools
to implement protocols for extreme weather
situations. The bill was nicknamed Yahushua’s
Law, in honor of the 12-year-old boy who died
during P.E. during a summer 2023 heatwave.
Unfortunately, weather protocols which
typically means keeping students inside creates
other problems and challenges. Firstly, not all of
our facilities have air-conditioning systems or
they need upgrading, so keeping students inside
on an extremely hot day may not be feasible for
some schools and students would need to be
sent home, losing instructional time. Keeping
students indoors is not a long-term solution
as we already know the detrimental effects on
the mental health of children (and adults) of
quarantine during the height of the COVID
pandemic. Especially our young learners, they
need to learn by playing and staying active.
The simple answer is to make our school’s
outdoor spaces cooler. The temperature of
today’s playgrounds are not like what we grew
up with in elementary school. For example, on
a 91 degree day this year, the asphalt measured
157 degrees without shade and 119 degrees with
shade, and a plastic slide measured 166 degrees,
while the grass under an oak tree measured 82
degrees. According to the California Schoolyard
Tree Canopy Equity study of 2023, PUSD school
sites tree canopy coverage ranges between 8%
and 15%, well below the 30% recommended by
urban forestry experts. This is why I introduced
this week at the PUSD Facilities Committee
meeting, the Resolution to Increase Tree Canopy
Levels and Reduce Asphalt in Outdoor Areas of
Pasadena Unified School District in order to
Enhance Student Learning Environment and
Safety.
Our buildings are between fifty and one
hundred years old – in some cases, it’s beyond
repair simply because they no longer make the
parts. This is why with Measure O funds of
2020, the district chose to modernize rather
than simply repair some schools as that would
be a more efficient use of tax payer dollars to
invest in construction that lasts. In November
2023, the Board approved a 5 Year Bond
Program, which has a construction timeline for
schools and the cost of each project. The plan
includes modernizing 7 elementary, middle,
and high schools across the district, each school
costing between $21 million and $63 million.
Additionally, many schools have and will
receive wet utility repair, electrical service, new
restrooms, accessibility/walkway repair, field
reconditioning, and HVAC repair and upgrades.
The total cost of the 5 Year Bond Program Plan
is about $470M. We would save $124M in state
matching funds if State Measure 2 passes (so
please VOTE YES on Measure 2)
You can find the 5 Year Bond Program at pusd.
us/departments/measure-o/master-plan
Additional projects beyond the $470 million
include district wide security lock replacement
so that teachers can easily lock doors from the
inside in an emergency situation, as well as
security cameras and secure front entry way at
each school. An additional $40 million budget is
reserved specifically for urgent health and safety
projects including HVAC, fire alarm systems,
structural building integrity, accessibility
(elevators and ramps), window replacement,
roofing, asphalt repair/reduction, lighting,
classroom repairs. I’m happy to report that Sierra
Madre Elementary successfully upgraded their
electrical system and HVAC modernization
this summer. For more detail on the current
status and expenditure of construction projects,
please go to PUSD Facilities & Capital Projects
Committee website for the agenda containing
the most recent Construction Project Status
Reports. In summary, while $140 million in
bonds have been issued and $84 million has
been spent to date, the remaining balance of the
$516 million of Measure O has been earmarked
according to the 5 Year Bond Program plan.
PUSD’s Measure R is a unique bond that a
local community group called PUSD Green
Schoolyard Coalition helped to craft. In
addition the traditional upgrades, this bond
includes outdoor greening projects. Founded by
a few Sierra Madre Elementary school parents,
this group successfully convinced the district
to include student-accessible green space as an
allowable use of Measure R funds, for example,
asphalt removal, stormwater retention systems,
bioswales, heat-mitigating surfaces, shade trees,
facilities infrastructure to support carbon-free
energy sources and waste management systems,
composting, pedestrian and bicycle paths,
electric bicycle stations and parking.
While Measure R funds building improvements,
PUSD’s Measure EE will help to fund the
competitive salaries our teachers and staff
deserve. Some of our teachers work multiple jobs
and often pay for classroom supplies out of their
own pocket. They deserve to be fully supported
for the quality instruction they provide for our
students. Given that 80% of our public school
funding comes from the state and the state
budget is only giving a 1.07% cost of living
adjustment this year, our district will need to
make up the difference to keep our quality
teachers and staff.
There are many choices on this November ballot.
This is an opportunity to invest in the 14,000
students of Pasadena Unified School District,
our emerging leaders for our community. I
humbly ask for your YES vote on Measure R,
Measure EE, and Measure 2.
Editor's Note: The entire City of Sierra Madre
is in District 6 of the Pasadena Unified School
District..
On Wednesday, October 9, at the PUSD School Board candidate forum for District 6 at
Sierra Madre Town Hall, I watched in frustration as the incumbent evaded public questions,
misrepresented her record, and avoided accountability.
Sierra Madre constituents in attendance said Ms. Fredericks had not been keeping the
community informed, for example, with the passage of the current PUSD ballot measures.
Ms. Fredericks placed the blame on the consultants who conducted the survey, claiming she
relied on their survey results to determine public support of the measures. She also said
she did not have enough time to inform the public because the resolution had just recently
passed.
However, the survey only reflected the input of 406 “likely voters” district-wide. At the
August 17, 2023 PUSD Board meeting, consultants presented the timeline, and at the
February 29, 2024 PUSD Board meeting, Ms. Fredericks voted to move forward with the
measures. Her answers stating she didn’t have enough time to inform the public nor gather
feedback in the area she serves were disingenuous.
The reality is that instead of keeping the public informed, Ms. Fredericks spent her time
volunteering for other political candidates, as well as traveling to DC and Sacramento to
meet with Congressional and State officials. Her re-election campaign was rewarded with
big-name endorsements while we were left in the dark (plus PUSD paid for these trips to DC
and Sacramento).
The discussion then shifted to questions on the current $516 million Measure O bond
allocation, Ms. Fredericks suggested that there were hundreds of millions of dollars that the
Board could still reallocate. In reality, although the bond has not been drawn down yet, those
funds are dedicated to specific projects over the next 5 years.
Ms. Fredericks pointed out that she advocated for a study session on health and safety
projects for all PUSD schools. Parents who were at the meetings, like myself, know this was
just grandstanding after finding out that she had a School Board challenger. This study
session she requested failed to capture any other Board votes because the Board had already
voted (6-1 with Ms. Fredericks in favor on Sept 7, 2023) to spend most of the bond money
to prioritize three schools (Longfellow, Madison, and Muir) and to allocate just $40 million
for the fire, life, and safety and other necessities for other schools. Ms. Fredericks voted to
prioritize modernizations based on a heat map of where most students live (which is not
in District 6) instead of spreading the money to the schools that objectively need the most
urgent infrastructure repairs.
There was an estimated $400 million in assessed needs and we had a $516 million bond.
Fredericks did not initially support ending facility disparity but has misled the public to
think she has. In fact, in her op-ed in Pasadena Now on Sept 27, 2023, Ms. Fredericks
advocated for closing more of our schools instead of repairing the schools where children
attend.
Ms. Fredericks attests she plans to “do better” if re-elected. She continues to evade the public
with her ability to blame others, without taking any accountability for her actions.
The time for change is now. If the challenger, Lisa Kroese, wins on November 5th, I know we
will get clear information, a chance to be involved in the decision process and a leader who is
able to gather information and share it with both constituents and the Board.
My vote is for Lisa Kroese and I hope yours is too. Tarah Kennedy
Tarah Kennedy is a District 6 voter, and a parent of two PUSD children.
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Mountain Views News 80 W Sierra Madre Blvd. No. 327 Sierra Madre, Ca. 91024 Office: 626.355.2737 Fax: 626.609.3285 Email: editor@mtnviewsnews.com Website: www.mtnviewsnews.com
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