Ridgefield resident Matthew White addresses the school bond proposal for the April 23 special election
Editor’s note: Opinions expressed in this letter to the editor are those of the author alone and do not reflect the editorial position of ClarkCountyToday.com
As a coach of youth sports in Ridgefield for the past four years, I’ve witnessed firsthand the importance of teamwork, planning, and leadership. In light of recent opposition to the upcoming school bond propositions, I want to address a few misconceptions and emphasize the urgent need for action.

Contrary to claims made in a recent opinion piece, the decision to build the Ridgefield Outdoor Recreation Complex (RORC) where it is was a prudent one, benefiting both the city and the school district. The city funded the complex and parking lots, but the district maintained ownership of the land, which has ensured priority field usage for our student athletes — a win-win for our community.
It was also suggested that this decision has prevented the district from building portables to deal with excess capacity. Nobody plans a school that includes portable farms like we’ve crammed into our existing schools, and nobody wants that. They’re more expensive to maintain in the long run, offer an inferior classroom experience, and are just plain unsightly. They should be treated as short-term band-aids, not long-term capacity solutions.
I have seen firsthand in my coaching experience how easy it is to be a critic on the sidelines who questions every detail of every plan and decision. What’s exponentially more difficult is to be a leader that initiates and implements solutions to big problems. A measure of skepticism is healthy for public discourse but we are well past the point of indecision and incessant criticism. We need leadership that can provide our community with new schools to deal with the pressing enrollment growth and infrastructure challenges we face, and I believe the current leadership of Ridgefield School District is doing just that.
The plans in the bonds we are voting on have been discussed for years and have undergone thorough scrutiny. They also have received unanimous support from the school board and city council. Now is not the time for hesitation or second-guessing. It’s time to invest in our children’s future and provide the educational resources they deserve.
Let’s rally together as a community to support the bond measure. It’s time to act — our children are counting on us. Vote ‘Yes’ on Propositions 10 and 11 and let’s pave the way for excellence in education in Ridgefield.
Matthew White
Ridgefield
Also read:
- POLL: Do the proposed changes to the Clark County Council’s Rules of Procedure suggest the council lacked authority in 2025?A new reader poll asks whether proposed changes to the Clark County Council’s Rules of Procedure indicate the council lacked clear authority during a 2025 board removal.
- Letter: ‘HSD needs to give a detailed line-item accounting of where the last levy went, and of how they plan to use this one’Randall Schultz-Rathbun urges Hockinson School District to provide detailed, transparent accounting of past and proposed levy spending before asking voters for additional funds.
- Letter: Interstate Bridge Replacement’s Park & Ride insanityBob Ortblad criticizes the Interstate Bridge Replacement Program’s proposed Park & Ride garages, arguing the costs are excessive and unlikely to receive federal funding.
- Opinion: Vancouver councilors responsible for stoking irrational fears in the communityClark County Today Editor Ken Vance sharply criticizes a Vancouver City Council declaration on immigration enforcement, arguing it fuels fear, undermines law enforcement, and lacks supporting evidence.
- Opinion: Washington should stop shielding domestic abusers and sexual offenders from deportationVancouver attorney Angus Lee argues Washington law improperly shields convicted domestic abusers, sexual offenders, and drunk drivers from deportation and urges lawmakers to change it.







