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Facilities News - Since 2001
New Jersey advocates urge state leaders to fix old school buildings by funding construction program-- Chalkbeat Newark New Jersey: February 14, 2025 [ abstract] A coalition of more than 100 organizations representing public school advocates, parents, teachers, and community members are calling on Gov. Phil Murphy and the state legislature to invest $500 million annually to fund New Jersey’s school construction program, starting with the upcoming budget.
Dozens of speakers gathered at a virtual town hall described the experiences of students and staff forced to learn and work in old and crumbling buildings to underscore what they say is an “urgent need” for more funding for school construction projects. A Newark Public Schools teacher said numerous students at Bard High School had to be displaced because classrooms were too cold while teachers from Jersey City and Paterson explained how schools in their districts were dealing with rodents and leaky roofs.
Healthy Schools Now, a coalition of 135 organizations across New Jersey, said it hosted the virtual town hall last week to highlight how years of inadequate funding for the New Jersey Schools Development Authority has left dozens of schools across the state in dire need of repair and replacement. The SDA is responsible for fully funding school construction projects in Newark and 30 other high-poverty districts in the state. It also provides grants and undertakes construction projects in regular operating districts under a cost-sharing arrangement.
-- Jessie Gómez With aging schools statewide, Maine looks for better funding solutions to address need-- WGME.com Maine: February 13, 2025 [ abstract]
DAYTON (WGME) -- Many of Maine’s schools are in need of significant upgrades, with air quality, security and space concerns creating significant challenges for students and educators.
As school districts across the state struggle to keep up with repairs and replacements, a new push is underway to reform how Maine funds school construction.
At Dayton Consolidated School, space is tight. For more than 30 years, the majority of students have been educated in portable classrooms, moving between separate buildings and braving the elements between class and lunch.
“The staff and the principal have done wonderful things to try and alleviate some of that,” Superintendent Jeremy Ray said. “But the fact of the matter is, not having kids in the same school building, especially pre-K through 5, is really problematic.”
Beyond space limitations, the school, built in 1950, also faces air quality concerns and other limitations related to technology.
"Just having enough power in each classroom can be a bit of a challenge, because some of the older classrooms, I believe, have two outlets in them," Ray said. "The spaces that were designed 75 years ago may not quite meet 21st century learning standards and what we want for our kids and our schools."
-- Dan Lampariello, CBS13 I-Team Extreme temps are closing Wake schools. Advocates say more money needed to fix problems.-- The News & Observer North Carolina: February 13, 2025 [ abstract]
It was 80 degrees inside Bugg Magnet Elementary School in the middle of end-of-year testing, so hot that teachers were hearing from their very uncomfortable students. “One student said, ‘Miss, can I go out in the hallway and lay on the cold tile with my shirt up?’” said Christina Cole, president of the Wake County chapter of the N.C. Association of Educators.
Cole repeated the story as told to her by a teacher, one of many anecdotes shared Wednesday evening at a rally and town hall meeting to spur community members to take action. The group estimates over two dozen schools have been forced to close at least once this school year due to extreme temperatures. They’re asking the Wake County Board of Commissioners to put a school bond on the ballot in 2026 to pay for deferred maintenance. “We’re focused on addressing facilities issues in our schools, specifically HVAC issues, because those have been so widely felt and incredibly disruptive to the school day,” Cole said. Last fall, the Wake County Public School System estimated it had over $200 million in deferred HVAC maintenance and replacement, and more than $600 million in total deferred maintenance.
-- Anna Roman Washoe County school board approves $99.5 million in funding for major projects-- Fox11 Nevada: February 12, 2025 [ abstract] RENO, Nev. — The Washoe County School Board had another busy meeting Tuesday, approving $99.5 million in funding to go toward a couple of major projects in the district.
One of the two projects included in the funding will build a new elementary school at the current Pine Middle School site. According to district staff, now that funding has been approved, building, site assessment and concept design will begin this month for the project.
Construction is expected to begin in the fall of 2026 and to wrap up in August of 2028.
"We're potentially merging several schools. So that process is going to look a little different," Trustee Christine Hull said at Tuesday's meeting.
The Reed High School Modernization Project is also included in the funding. That project will be done in two phases, staff said. The first phase will focus on classroom expansion and athletic and band expansion, among other areas.
-- SOPHIE LINCOLN Idaho Passed $2 Billion in Funding for School Building Repairs. It’s Not Nearly Enough.-- Pro Publica Idaho: February 11, 2025 [ abstract] Last year, Idaho legislators approved a 10-year, $2 billion funding bill to help school districts throughout the state whose buildings were crumbling and sometimes dangerous.
But early reports from districts and a new state cost estimate show that even after passage of the historic funding bill, districts are still struggling to meet their most dire needs. That has put local school officials in the same position they have long faced: asking voters to approve additional funds.
School districts in Idaho rely heavily on taxpayers to approve local bonds to pay for school construction and repair. The state’s unusual policy, however, requires two-thirds of voters for a bond to pass, a threshold many superintendents say is nearly impossible to reach. Most states require less.
The Idaho Statesman and ProPublica reported in 2023 how the bond requirement, combined with the Legislature’s reluctance to invest in school facilities, has forced students to attend schools with faulty heating systems, leaking roofs and broken plumbing. Idaho has long ranked last or near last among states in education spending per pupil.
Much of the new money from the funding bill is being distributed based on the number of students attending school in each district — a big problem for smaller and more rural schools. An analysis by ProPublica and the Idaho Statesman shows that most of the state’s school districts will get less money than it would take to build a new school. Around 40% of the districts will receive $2 million or less, which some administrators said wouldn’t be enough to cover their biggest repairs.
-- Becca Savransky, Idaho Statesman General Assembly moves forward with bill to allow localities to charge additional sales tax for school construction-- Wavy.com Virginia: February 11, 2025 [ abstract] RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Help could be on the way for school construction projects in Virginia.
“Localities all across Virginia have asked for additional tools to start to solve their own problems,” Senator Jeremy McPike (D-Prince William) told 8News.
McPike has introduced a bill that would allow localities to charge an additional 1% sales tax with the money going toward school construction and renovation, but only if voters in that locality approve the increase through a referendum.
“That’s really the key,” McPike explained. “It’s the choice of the local voter. They know the infrastructure of their schools. Their kids go there.”
McPike’s bill comes after a 2021 report found that over half of Virginia’s schools were more than 50 years old. That same report found that the cost of replacing those schools would be nearly $25 billion.
“When kids roll into school every day they can see whether their community’s invested in their schools or not. We have leaky roofs. We have outdated technology all across Virginia,” McPike told 8News.
-- Tyler Englander Governor proposes cuts to BEST school building fund-- Axios Denver Colorado: February 10, 2025 [ abstract] To pay for schools, Gov. Jared Polis is proposing cuts to a fund that builds schools.
Why it matters: The rob-Peter-to-pay-Paul scenario reflects the difficult task ahead of balancing a $40 billion budget with a $1 billion shortfall.
How it works: Building Excellent Schools Today (BEST) is a high-profile program that distributes competitive grants to build new schools and upgrade existing ones, in large part with money from marijuana excise taxes.
The money typically covers improvements related to health and safety, including expensive security upgrades and improvements to the heating and air conditioning systems.
By the numbers: In the current fiscal year, the state issued $155.2 million in grants for 44 projects, part of the $3 billion-plus the fund has distributed since its creation in 2008, state records show.
Yes, but: The annual demand for money is much higher. This year, the applications totaled $659 million for 56 projects — well above the previous year's ask of $522 million.
So far the program has covered a mere fraction of the $20 billion in assessed need through fiscal year 2029, according to the Colorado Department of Education.
Between the lines: About three-quarters of the dollars to date went to rural districts. Another 27% went to urban schools, state statistics show.
-- John Frank Board of Education Closes on 61 Acre Purchase for New Kyrock Elementary-- The Edmonson Voice Kentucky: February 10, 2025 [ abstract] Another step in the long process of building the new Kyrock Elementary has been completed with the purchase of 61 acres directly across from the current school, with construction being planned to begin in the early summer of this year.
According to the Edmonson County Board of Education, the tentative date for school to begin at the new building will be August of 2027. Initial plans were to build next to the existing Kyrock Elementary, but the availability of the new site brought new options that the board deemed as better. The new Kyrock is slated to be built for a 550 student Pre-K through 6th grade facility.
According to School Superintendent Brian Alexander, the new land purchase will allow the current building to remain intact during the construction, and then repurposed after the school moves location. The cost of demolishing the current Kyrock school would have been more than the cost of purchasing the new property, per required guidelines.
The property is the former farm of the Joe Don Patton family, which borders both Hwy 259 N and Black Gold Road.
“The Board and I would like to thank the Patton family for working with us on this property purchase," said Alexander. "It was important to Mr. Patton’s family (widow Sherry, and children Coty Patton and Verena Tracy) that this property be used for something meaningful to honor his memory. I think they’ve done that. Also, a huge thank you to Cindy Hudson McCombs, their realtor, for her diligence in making this purchase a reality."
-- Darren Doyle Volunteers build 16 garden beds at La Paloma Elementary-- Village News California: February 08, 2025 [ abstract] FALLBROOK – La Paloma teachers, staff, and local UC Master Gardeners came together to set up 16 corrugated metal raised garden beds on the campus of La Paloma Elementary School, along with the forming Fallbrook Ranch Lions Club, Saturday, Jan. 18.
The garden beds will be used in a school gardening program for La Paloma K-6 students where they will learn to grow and care for various vegetables, native plants, and a butterfly garden.
La Paloma Assistant Principal Bridgid Murray put in a request for a school garden consultant with the Master Gardener Association of San Diego County in hopes to revitalize a garden area on campus that needed upkeep after a face lift in 2018-2019.
The drip system that was in place had also stopped working, requiring watering to be done by hand. And when the pandemic hit, all work on the garden stopped. Master Gardener consultant and Fallbrook resident Sharon Zornes sponsored the garden project and put in a request for a $500 grant to help purchase materials and tools for the garden, which was granted.
Fallbrook Union Elementary School District provided mulch for the garden area, along with a flatbed trailer to haul away weeds and the old wooden garden beds. La Paloma Principal Aimee Plette was able to secure $1,500 of Enriched Learning Opportunities funds to purchase the new beds, hoses, gardening gloves, and watering cans.
-- Staff Writer School district maintenance plans take shape-- Twin Cities Pioneer Press Minnesota: February 08, 2025 [ abstract]
District 112 will seek school board approval to advertise for bids on four maintenance projects at the board’s Feb. 23 meeting, with anticipated costs expected to be slightly less than $1 million.
Three of the projects involve original portions of the Chaska High School site, including reconstructing the tennis courts for approximately $438,000, resurfacing the track and field event area for approximately $120,000, and renovating parking lots for $264,000. A fourth project would be to renovate the District Education Center parking lot for approximately $120,000.
Pending the board approval, the district would choose contractors by March or April and construction would proceed during the summer months.
The projects are part of the first year in the district’s 10 year Alternative Facility Plan, which totals $26,852,962.
To fund the next three years of the plan, district officials are expected to ask for school board approval on a $10 million bond sale date in March, with the sale occurring in April.
The bond money would be used to pay for maintenance projects on current district facilities over the 2013-15 fiscal years. Significant items in those years include nearly $1.5 million to replace roof sections at Bluff Creek Elementary, Chaska High School and Chaska Middle School East and approximately $250,000 to renovate the District Education center HVAC system.
The bond’s net tax impact on a $250,000 home would be an additional $10 per year.
-- Chuck Friedbauer ‘Passive House’ Design Used To Build Impressive NYC School Could Make It Fireproof-- New Haven Register New York: February 08, 2025 [ abstract] Following a slew of national natural disasters—most recently the Southern California wildfires and the historic winter storm that hit Southern states—interest in durable and sustainable architectural designs resurged.
Leading the pack, passive house designs have existed for decades and are gaining popularity again, as their construction can help mitigate damages when disaster strikes.
Just recently, a house in Pacific Palisades, CA, which was built in 2024, survived while neighboring homes burned down in the devastating wildfires. The house on Iliff Street was the “single one” to remain "intact,” Mansion Global reported, thanks to its specific features, many of which follow the principles of passive home design.
Now, the first passive house-certified school in New York has opened, and it may just be a sign of things to come.
-- Yael Bizouati-Kennedy Proposed constitutional amendment puts school capital construction cost on local school districts-- Gillette News Record Wyoming: February 07, 2025 [ abstract]
Some Wyoming lawmakers are pushing for a constitutional amendment that, if approved by voters, would change the way the construction of new schools across the state is funded.
Senate Joint Resolution 6, “School capital construction-constitutional amendment,” was approved by the Senate Education Committee this week on a 3-2 vote and placed on the Senate’s general file. On Thursday, the resolution passed the Senate Committee of the Whole.
The proposed amendment puts the cost of school capital construction back on local communities, as opposed to the state, overturning a state Supreme Court decision.
Sponsored by Sen. Charles Scott, R-Casper, the bill has several co-sponsors, including Rep. John Bear, R-Gillette. If it passes the Senate and the House and is signed by the governor, it will go on the general election ballot in 2026 to be decided on by Wyoming voters.
Scott explained that the “old system” has stopped working. It had been funded by money the state was getting from federal coal lease bonuses, but those have stopped.
“We’re afraid it will hurt our ability to fund the operations of the schools,” Scott said Monday. “For those reasons, we’re looking for an entirely different system.”
-- JONATHAN GALLARDO Education board now weighing school consolidations, closures-- Pacific Daily News Guam: February 07, 2025 [ abstract]
Guam Education Board members are now weighing the recommendations of Education Superintendent Erik Swanson on which schools needed to be consolidated and closed or decommissioned, and a decision could come as early as Feb. 18.
“We have accepted the recommendation report from the superintendent and it is now up to the board to make a decision on each of those recommendations,” GEB Chairman Angel Sablan told the Pacific Daily News.
Members of the board, representatives from the Guam Department of Education and school officials met in a recent work session to discuss the superintendent’s recommendations, including potential school consolidations and redistricting plans.
One key proposal involves consolidating schools such as Chief Brodie Memorial Elementary School and Juan M. Guerrero Elementary School, which could save the district about $1.9 million, according to Deputy Superintendent Wade Paul.
Similarly, merging Marcial Sablan and Harry S. Truman Elementary could result in $2.8 million in savings, Paul said.
During the work session, the board emphasized the need for transparency and community engagement, with plans to revisit the issue in February or March.
The discussion also touched on the potential use of vacant schools for revenue generation and the importance of balancing school enrollments.
However, concerns were raised during Wednesday’s board meeting about the impact on enrollment, support staff, and the broader community.
-- Julianne Hernandez L.A. District Sets Aside $2.2 Billion to Rebuild Schools-- Governing California: February 06, 2025 [ abstract]
The Los Angeles school district will set aside $2.2 billion to repair or rebuild three fire-damaged schools and to make all campuses more “natural disaster resilient.”
L.A. schools Superintendent Alberto Carvalho on Tuesday also announced that new health and safety evaluations are being undertaken at two smoke-damaged campuses near the burn scar of last month’s Pacific Palisades fire. Parents at Canyon Charter Elementary and Revere Charter Middle School had expressed concerns over whether these recently reopened campuses were safe.
Attendance at both schools has been below normal, especially at Canyon, where some parents have left the school or said they intend to.
In a related development, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass issued an emergency directive that could help the already distressed child-care sector in the wake of the recent fires. Displaced day cares would be allowed to reopen anywhere in the city and operate at higher capacity.
Anticipating Future Disasters
It didn’t take long for the Los Angeles Unified School District to plan for drawing down a huge chunk of $9 billion in school construction and modernization bonds that voters approved in November.
-- Howard Blume and Jenny Gold, Los Angeles Times Here’s What Each School Board Member Is Willing to Cut From Modernization Projects-- Willamette Week Oregon: February 05, 2025 [ abstract] As Portland Public Schools tries to curb its sky-high school modernization costs, district officials asked School Board members where they’d be willing to make cuts for upcoming projects at Cleveland, Ida B. Wells and Jefferson high schools.
Those three high schools are on the docket for modernizations from the district’s upcoming $1.83 billion schools bond in the May 2025 election. They were also slated to be some of the nation’s most expensive new schools before the board asked planning committees to look for cost-saving measures in December.
On Tuesday, the School Board was finally presented with a long-awaited report from Cornerstone Management Group, whose findings were first reported in The Oregonian. The report compared five Portland rebuilds with nearby Beaverton, finding Portland spent much more than the neighboring district.
At a School Board meeting on Tuesday night, a district staff memo grouped cost-saving recommendations from the report into three broad categories: reducing building sizes and costly spaces, adjusting sustainability standards, and adjusting equity in contracting goals.
Reducing building size is the top priority for district Superintendent Dr. Kimberlee Armstrong. While Beaverton High School is being built at about 300,000 square feet, all three upcoming projects are slated for 320,000 square feet. “My recommendation is that we pursue a 300,000-square-foot-size high school that would save $24 million across three projects,” Armstrong said Tuesday.
“The hope was to be able to save upwards of $70 million or $80 million through this report and [with] all of these features that’s just not going to happen. So what are some small wins that we can get out of this?” she asked board members.
-- Joanna Hou Charter board hopes for strategic allocation of school building funds-- WV Metro News West Virginia: February 05, 2025 [ abstract]
The board overseeing charter schools in West Virginia expressed hope that the state will get bang for its buck through dollars available for construction or improvements.
The West Virginia Professional Charter School Board is preparing for a recently-passed policy allowing charter schools to benefit from funding through the state School Building Authority. House Bill 227 passed during special session last year.
It added a line to state code to say: “A public charter school may, in its name and its sole discretion, submit application to the School Building Authority for funding for the purchase of a building to be used for public charter school purposes and for the cost of the project.”
Now charter schools have been applying for that funding.
“To my knowledge, all of West Virginia’s brick-and-mortar charter schools have submitted their applications for this grant opportunity,” said James Paul, executive director of the charter schools board, adding that representatives of the state School Building Authority have been making site visits to applicants.
Charter schools receive financial support from the state’s public education system and are given greater operational latitude in exchange for the possibility of losing their right to operate if they fail.
-- Brad McElhinny 4 Ways to Modernize School Emergency Response Plans-- Campus Safety Magazine National: January 27, 2025 [ abstract]
In an era where safety concerns have become an unavoidable reality, schools must prioritize robust and comprehensive emergency response plans. From natural disasters to security threats, these blueprints outline how schools and school districts will prevent and address situations that threaten school safety, such as violence, natural disasters, and medical emergencies.
Students and educators deserve clear protocols that safeguard their well-being in times of crisis. While about 90% of districts have an emergency response plan, too many schools remain underprepared, relying on outdated procedures or insufficient training that leave communities vulnerable.
It’s time for districts to reassess, invest in modern solutions, and implement proactive strategies that build resilience and confidence.
-- Jason Schoenleber After setbacks, plan to replace run-down Owyhee school on reservation moving forward-- The Nevada Independent Nevada: January 26, 2025 [ abstract] Tens of millions of dollars allocated to replace a dilapidated, 70-year-old campus serving students who live on a reservation near the Nevada-Idaho border was considered one of the biggest triumphs for tribal communities in the 2023 legislative session.
But the building cost estimate quickly exceeded the original number — the Owyhee Combined School’s remote location makes the project more difficult than building in an urban area — and no companies placed bids for the project last August.
Despite facing a legal challenge over the school construction funding mechanism and a ticking clock to use the millions of dollars in state funds, district officials are trying again — and are optimistic that they’ll get back on track with a more scaled-back version of the project.
On Thursday, the district received one bid from a Utah-based contractor, MGM Construction, that came in under the nearly $65 million that lawmakers appropriated to the Elko County School District through a 2023 bill, AB519, for the construction of the new Owyhee school. The school board is expected to vote on the bid at its Feb. 4 meeting.
"It's exhausting," said tribal Chairman Brian Mason during a Friday phone interview. "I guess the easy part was actually getting a bill sponsored, voted on, passed and signed by the governor."
-- Rocio Hernandez GaDOE updates rule to prioritize student safety-- AllOnGeorgia.com Georgia: January 25, 2025 [ abstract] The State Board of Education has amended Rule 160-5-4-.15 to ensure collaboration between local school systems and public safety experts during the design phase of new school facilities, a significant step to enhance the safety and security of public school facilities across the state, announced State School Superintendent Richard Woods.
Under the updated rule, local boards of education are required to consult with their municipal or county law enforcement or emergency management agencies when designing new facilities or structures intended to house or serve public school children. This proactive measure underscores the Georgia Department of Education’s commitment to creating safe, secure environments for Georgia’s students and educators.
“The safety of our students is our highest priority,” Superintendent Woods said. “By setting the expectation that all local school systems collaborate with law enforcement and emergency management professionals, we are taking an essential step toward ensuring that our schools are designed with safety in mind from the ground up.”
-- Staff Writer Historic Spartanburg school building set for major renovation work-- GoUpstate.com South Carolina: January 24, 2025 [ abstract]
As he stood in the old Dean Street School building earlier this week, memories came flooding back for 88-year-old Bill Worthy.
“I started right here in this room in first grade,” he told a group of Wofford College students who were getting a tour of the building – the oldest public school structure in the city of Spartanburg and, before desegregation, one of several all-Black schools in the city.
Thanks to a $452,000 earmark approved by the state legislature, the building, now owned by the local chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, will undergo a major renovation.
As chapter president Bernard Wheeler explained to the Wofford students, “We envision this as a center for the community. We want to promote youth programming.”
The opportunity to "secure the building" and solidify its future as a place for young people “is an honor,” Wheeler said. “We have the space, and we’re very fortunate. It’s something that we’re obligated to do.”
-- Baker Maultsby Spartanburg Herald-Journal
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