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LWV League of Women Voters of California
Smart Voter
San Mateo County, CA November 7, 2000 Election
Measure D
San Mateo Union High School District Bonds For Repair and Renovation
San Mateo Union High School District

Bond (2/3 Approval Required)

58,979 / 72.2% Yes votes ...... 22,730 / 27.8% No votes

See Also: Index of all Measures

Information shown below: Fiscal Impact | Yes/No Meaning | Impartial Analysis | Arguments |

To repair and rehabilitate school facilities to meet current health, safety and instructional standards, including replacing deteriorated plumbing, inadequate heating, ventilation, roofs, windows and lighting, refurbishing bathrooms, safety systems, classrooms, and computer and science laboratories, and to establish an independent oversight committee to guarantee that funds are spent only on school improvements, shall the San Mateo Union High School District issue $137,500,000 in bonds, at interest rates within the legal limit?

Fiscal Impact:
TAX RATE STATEMENT (SECTION 9401 OF THE ELECTIONS CODE)

To: The voters voting in the November 7, 2000 election on the question of the issuance of $137,500,000 General Obligation Bonds of the San Mateo Union High School District:

You are hereby notified in accordance with Section 9401 of the Elections Code of California of the following:

1. The best estimate from official sources of the tax rate which would be required to be levied to fund principal and interest payments during the first fiscal year after the first sale of bonds (Fiscal Year 2001-2002), based on assessed valuations available at the time of the election and taking into account future growth, is the following: $.01683 per $100 of assessed valuation, which equates to $16.83 per $100,000 of assessed valuation.

2. The best estimate from official sources of the tax rate which would be required to be levied to fund principal and interest payments during the fiscal year after the last sale of bonds and an estimate of the year in which that rate will apply (Fiscal Year 2007-2008), based on assessed valuations available at the time of the election and taking into account future growth, is as follows: $.01683 per $100 of assessed valuation, which equates to $16.83 per $100,000 of assessed valuation. Year after the last sale of bonds: 2007-08.

3. The best estimate from official sources of the highest tax rate which would be required to be levied to fund principal and interest payments on the bonds and the year in which such rate would apply, based on assessed valuations at the time of the election and taking into account future growth, is as follows: $.01683 per $100 of assessed valuation, which equates to $16.83 per $100,000 of assessed valuation. Year of highest tax rate: Tax is projected to be the same every year.

Meaning of Voting Yes/No
A YES vote of this measure means:
A two-thirds "yes" vote on this measure would authorize San Mateo Union High School District to issue bonds in an amount not to exceed $137.5 million for the specified purposes of the financing the repair and rehabilitation of school facilities to meet current health, safety and instructional standards, including replacing plumbing, heating, ventilation, roofs, windows and lighting; refurbishing bathrooms, safety systems, classrooms, computer and science laboratories, and to establish an independent oversight committee to guarantee that funds are spent only on school improvements.

A NO vote of this measure means:
A "no" vote would prevent San Mateo Union High School District from issuing bonds of up to $137.5 million.

Impartial Analysis
Education Code section 1510 authorizes a school district to issue bonds for specified purposes. However, the voters must first approve the issuance of the bonds at an election by a two-thirds vote.

This measure would authorize the San Mateo Union High School District to issue bonds in an amount not to exceed $137.5 million. The bonds will have an interest rate not to exceed the legal maximum and shall mature in no more than 40 years. The Board of Trustees has listed the specified purposes of the bonds to be: financing the repair and rehabilitation of school facilities to meet current health, safety and instructional standards, including replacing plumbing, heating, ventilation, roofs, windows and lighting; refurbishing bathrooms, safety systems, classrooms, computer and science laboratories, and to establish an independent oversight committee to guarantee that funds are spent only on school improvements.

A "yes" vote on this measure would authorize San Mateo Union High School District to issue bonds in an amount not to exceed $137.5 million for the specified purposes of the financing the repair and rehabilitation of school facilities to meet current health, safety and instructional standards, including replacing plumbing, heating, ventilation, roofs, windows and lighting; refurbishing bathrooms, safety systems, classrooms, computer and science laboratories, and to establish an independent oversight committee to guarantee that funds are spent only on school improvements.

A "no" vote would prevent San Mateo Union High School District from issuing bonds of up to $137.5 million.

This measure passes if two-thirds (2/3) of those voting on the measure vote "yes."

Contact AGAINST Measure D:
http://www.hsbond.com

  News and Analysis

San Francisco Chronicle

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Arguments For Measure D Arguments Against Measure D
Our local high schools are among the oldest in the Bay Area - some over 70 years old. Classrooms are crowded, and many need significant repair. Over the years, the school district has, within limited resources, kept them in good working order, but the age of facilities, their condition and classroom size, have created a critical need for renovation.

Classrooms, science laboratories and school libraries are inadequate. Electrical systems are old and circuits blow regularly. New electrical wiring is needed to access technology. Bathrooms built years ago are antiquated and unsightly; intercoms and fire alarm systems do not meet current safety codes; aging roofs and windows that leak damage classrooms.

Following the defeat of previous bond measures to rehabilitate local high schools, a task force was established, including former opponents, to re-examine the physical condition of the schools. After studying the needs of the schools, the task force recommended a modest and cost effective plan that addresses the most pressing and urgent needs of the schools.

Over $50 million in improvements that are needed, but not immediately critical, were eliminated to lower the cost and tax rate.

Measure D will:

  • Renovate and upgrade classrooms
  • Modernize science classrooms and laboratories
  • Renovate old, deteriorated bathrooms
  • Upgrade electrical systems
  • Upgrade fire safety systems and intercoms
  • Repair leaky roofs and windows

No Measure D funds can be spent on district administrative offices or salaries. By law, all funds raised by Measure D must be spent only on repairs and renovations.

An independent citizens' oversight committee will oversee the projects to ensure every dollar is spent properly and that buildings are maintained in proper condition.

All money raised by Measure D is tax deductible and will stay in our community to benefit local children.

We urge your Yes vote.

/s/Jackie Speier
State Senator, 8th Senate District
/s/Byron Sher
State Senator 11th Senate District
/s/Mark Church
San Mateo County Supervisor-Elect, 1st District
/s/Sue Lempert
San Mateo City Councilmember
/s/Jim Ruane
San Bruno City Councilmember

Rebuttal to Arguments For
THE SAN MATEO UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT SAYS NO!
  • NO to selling its multi-million dollar surplus Crestmoor property
  • NO to timely repairs of disgusting bathrooms - but YES to maintaining the lavish new Olympic-sized swimming pool at Burlingame High School
  • NO to cost-effective teardown and replacing of old schools
  • NO to major school maintenance for the next seven years.

The District hoards valuable assets, ignores pressing maintenance needs while budgeting for frills, treats students unequally, and still demands more taxpayer money. Seven high schools, shackled together in one huge mismanaged District, all shoddy, all needy, look on helplessly as the District REFUSES to sell unneeded Crestmoor High School.

There is a better solution.

A single high school district serving six cities is unnecessary. Localization -- combining existing high schools with existing cities' elementary districts would provide a more stable, responsive, cost-effective and fairer system.

Advantages:

  • Save money - eliminate separate and expensive High School administration.
  • Parents have control of schools in their own cities.
  • Students attend high school with middle school friends.
  • Integrated curriculum - Kindergarten through Grade 12.

Giving more taxpayers' dollars to a bloated High School District is financial foolishness when they already mismanage the money they've got. This wealthy District, richer than 97% of all California districts, refuses to consider any options except asking taxpayers for more money.

VOTE NO ON MEASURE D http://www.hsbond.com

/s/Marilyn Gomes
Telecommunications Project Manager
/s/Arthur Weiner
/s/John Mason
Consultant
/s/Bobbie Snavely
Taxpayers Association for Responsible School Spending
/s/Donna Bischoff

The bond to repair San Mateo Union High School District's facilities failed twice in the past two years - last time losing in four of the District's six cities. The same problems of poor planning, financial mismanagement and credibility remain. Poor Planning
  • District acknowledges the possibility of unforeseen costly structural problems during rehabilitation. Retrofitting is not cost-effective for long economic life; e.g., Sunnybrae Elementary in San Mateo was razed and rebuilt because new construction is more cost-effective (reopens November 2000).
  • District's January 2000 demographic study reports a likely decrease in enrollment. District continues to plan for more students. Financial Mismanagement
  • District refuses to sell Crestmoor (Peninsula) in San Bruno - not used as a comprehensive high school for 20 years.
  • Crestmoor has only 200 students with a capacity of 1,500 student
  • Its 39 acres or prime land are worth $40-80 million. District receives $300,000 in rent each year - less than a 1% annual return.
  • District's latest 10-to-20 year "Facilities Master Plan" doesn't mention this valuable, under-used surplus asset. Credibility Gap This bond is $137.5 million but District plans to spend $196 million. $58.5 million difference comes from:
  • Maintenance deferred for the next 7 years
  • Projected developer fees that assume continued development at current levels
  • Estimated interest on revenue from the sale of bonds
  • Money coming from the state - it's still your tax money District consultants say repair requirements are $269 million. Which projects will be ignored - or is there yet another bond in the future?

Taxpayers must not be taxed for ill-planned projects. You, your children and your grandchildren will be paying for this poorly conceived plan for the next 25 years. Only new cost-effective options and responsible planning will create a bond worth passing.

Vote NO on Measure D http://www.hsbond.com

/s/Bobbie Snavely
Taxpayers Assn. For Responsible School Spending
/s/Donna M. Bischoff, Ph.D
Bischoff Market Research
/s/David R. Kruss
Taxpayers Assn. For Responsible School Spending

Rebuttal to Arguments Against
Less than two years ago, local voters overwhelmingly voted in favor of a bond measure to repair and renovate our local high schools. Unfortunately, that measure failed by less than 300 votes to reach the necessary 66.7% approval needed for passage.

Since then, a citizen's task force re-evaluated the physical condition of our schools and recommended a new plan to cover the most critical health, safety and classroom renovations. They worked hard to scale down plans, eliminating over $50,000,000 from previous proposals. There are no frills, no expensive "wish lists", no blank checks.

Even these opponents do not refute the critical need to renovate the schools.

Opponents say, "tear the schools down - rebuild them from the ground up!" Do they really think it would be cheaper/better to do so? They never mention where the money to do this would come from.

Opponents say, "sell schools!" All schools are presently used for instruction. Every school district in California (including Palo Alto) that has sold sites to developers eventually regretted the decision. Selling schools to fund repairs is irresponsible and not a legitimate option.

Current law requires local funding to qualify for state matching funds. If Measure D fails, future state funds will be given to other school districts that have matching funds.

Our quality of life is dependent on good schools. Good schools help maintain property values.

Please support Measure D.

/s/ T. Jack Foster
Foster Enterprises
/s/State Senator Jackie Speier
8th Senate District
/s/State Senator Byron Sher
11th Senate District
/s/Deborah E. G. Wilder
Mayor City of Foster City
/s/Jim Ruane
City of San Bruno Council Member


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Created: January 25, 2001 02:35
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