Vermont Standard
11/27/19
By Allan Stein
Standard Staff
A majority of the Windsor Central Unified District School Board
authorized on Monday the acceptance of private donations totaling
$235,000 for a study to assess costs for building a middle-high school
in Woodstock.
The restricted donations
are only for use toward a feasibility study, which will be conducted by
Lavallee Brensinger Architects (LBA) at a projected cost of $425,000.
LBA is the same firm that produced a comprehensive facilities master plan for the district, which included the option to build a new middle- high school.
The total estimated cost of implementing the master plan, with new
construction, is approximately $68 million. However, school officials
feel those numbers are pliable, and can come in lower with a proper
study.
“This (feasibility) study is about getting to the numbers.
This is an opportunity (that the board) is not going to have again,” said Bridgewater board member Matthew Hough.
Even so, the building project is not a “fait accompli,” Hough said.
The donations are from three anonymous sources — in sums of $200,000,
$25,000, and $10,000, respectively. Funding for the study will be
released once matching funds or pledges are secured, or in lesser
increments with legal written permission by the donors.
As restricted money, the donations may be allocated for use toward the
cost of the LBA and Master Plan Team fees for the next phase of
middle-high school project planning, according to a WCSU fact sheet.
This will include, in part, architectural, structural, civil/
landscape, engineering, geotechnical, a traffic study and “other work”
as outlined in LBA’s proposal.
The recently created New Building Committee recommended an
expenditure of $30,000 of district funds from unused Act 46
consolidation grant funds, also for use toward the LBA feasibility
study.
At Monday’s meeting, the board passed that recommendation, 10-3.
The board also voted, 112, to authorize the district superintendent to
enter into a project contract with LBA to support new building planning
and design services.
Although funding was accepted, there was still much discussion about the study and building project.
Earlier this year, at the June 10 board meeting, the board endorsed
another study committee’s recommendation to do a study of the
“financial feasibility” of a district-wide facility improvement plan,
including a middle-high school building option.
“We never said it would cost money to do a financial feasibility
study,” said Barnard board member Pamela Fraser at Monday’s meeting.
“I feel that spending any money is premature, and it’s not what we voted in June,” she said.
Fraser added the June 10 board vote could be used to “further the
notion that this specific (school) rebuild is the only possible solution
to the building’s needs.”
At Monday’s meeting, Killington Town Manager Chet Hagenbarth said his concern with a feasibility study is timing and lack of “base information.”
“The reality is without there being site work we don’t know where we
can put the building. All of the design work could end up being for
naught,” Hagenbarth said.
“I think we’re putting the cart before the horse. You’re putting a lot of money at risk,” he added.
“This whole plan is just ludicrous,” said Killington resident Robert Montgomery about the cost of doing a feasibility study.
A new school building “is not going to result in better grades,” he said.
“This is an ill conceived (building project) plan. It’s going to have
major tax increases, which most Vermonters cannot afford now,” he said
in a follow-up interview. “A lot of this (project information) is the
first time people have heard about this. As more people are finding out
about this, and how it’s being kept underneath the radar, there’s not a
lot of support for this at this time,” Montgomery said.
As a former developer, Montgomery said he believes that refurbishing
the existing middle-high school building would be a more “cost-effective
option as opposed to a “tear down.”
In the meantime, school district officials have been conducting public
tours of the middle-high school building to point out the dilapidated
condition of the building, and its antiquated heating, ventilation and
electrical systems. The school was built in 1958.
While national studies show a link between poor air quality and
student performance, Woodstock school officials said, no such studies
have been done at the middle- high school to date.
Killington board member Jim Haff said if air quality in the school is bad, “please tell me why it is still open.”
“I am not here to slow down the process of a vote” on a new school,” he said, “but stop the scare tactics.”
Woodstock board member Claire Drebitko described the feasibility study as an “important next step to rightsize” the building project’s cost and scope.
Allen Stein did a very good reporting job on a long confusing evening. On a disturbing note, there were a number of board members who were not present on this very important topic. It is also unsettling that this issue, which could have a colossal impact on our taxes, has been kept under the radar. If you're interested in slowing this process down please contact me, Bob Montgomery, at 236-5389.
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