News & Observer | newsobserver.com | Resistance revs up over school repairs

Published: Oct 30, 2006 12:00 AM
Modified: Nov 03, 2006 10:40 AM

Resistance revs up over school repairs

For $380 million, say critics of Wake's bond plan, it's wasteful

 

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ABOUT BONDS

WHAT THEY ARE

A way of borrowing money, with voter approval and guaranteed by the county's taxing power, for school construction and renovations.

WHAT THEY WOULD BUY

A $970 million bond issue would help pay for 15 new elementary and middle year-round schools, two new high schools, land for 13 future schools, renovations and other needs.

HOW MUCH TAXES WOULD GO UP

4.7 cents per $100 of assessed value, or $70.50 a year on a $150,000 home, if the referendum passes.

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CORRECTION

A story on Page 1A on Monday incorrectly reported that the John Locke Foundation and Americans for Prosperity are largely funded by Art Pope. The Locke Foundation is largely funded by the John William Pope Foundation, of which Pope is president and director. The Pope family foundation also is a major contributor to the state chapter of Americans for Prosperity.

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The $23 million makeover proposed for Lacy Elementary School is everything that people have come to love -- and hate -- about the request by Wake County schools for $970 million in school construction bonds.

Bond supporters see Lacy as one of 13 old schools in bad need of repair. Bond opponents see Lacy as an example of wasteful spending.

Voters will decide a winner in this debate Nov. 7. If the bonds fail, renovations at many of the schools could be reduced or eliminated.

Beverley Clark, whose Raleigh district would get four of the major school renovations, thinks the changes are in the best overall interests of the district.

"Why should a taxpayer in an older part of the city or county that's been paying taxes for 20 years have a decrepit school when some property that was farmland six months ago is turned into a new school?" Clark asked.

But bond critics, who have heard this argument many times before, say that kind of logic misses the point.

"The fact is, you can't have everything," said Fran DeLuca, director of the state chapter of Americans for Prosperity, a group that favors limited government and opposes the bonds. "You make choices about what you can afford and what you can live without."

Renovations are typically a major part of Wake's school construction programs, accounting for about half the money spent.

This time, renovations represent about one-third of the district's building program -- or $380 million out of total construction costs of $1.056 billion.

The $380 million would be spent on major renovations at 13 schools, smaller repairs at 100 schools and new computers. The rest of the money would be used for construction of 17 new schools as well as land and design costs for 13 future school sites.

Mike Burriss, assistant superintendent for facilities, said 86 percent of the renovation money would be spent to correct heating, ventilating and air-conditioning problems so the schools are safe, healthy places.

Critics question why those renovations sometimes cost as much as a new building. But in some cases, Burriss said, the district is actually building a new school on the site of the old one. Changing the heating-and-cooling system is so expensive, he said, that it makes more sense in the long run to replace some buildings rather than keep existing ones.

"We've been band-aiding this for years," Burriss said. "You sometimes have to renovate and replace everything."

School officials say the 13 schools scheduled for major repairs are 30 to 50 years old and most have never had major renovations.

"I've spoken in some schools that are in desperate need of renovations, some of which have been promised renovations for decades," said Phil Zachary, a leader of Friends of Wake County, the nonprofit group formed to get the bonds approved. "It's been a long time coming."

Lacy Elementary School, situated in an older, affluent section of West Raleigh, is often used as an example by the school district. Renovations there include demolishing two 1950s buildings where poor air quality is blamed for nosebleeds, pneumonia and various illnesses among teachers and students.

This month, the school's head custodian was taken to the emergency room after vomiting and having breathing problems while cleaning a room with poor ventilation. The room was closed and the academically gifted students who were using it have been moved to the media center.


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Staff writer T. Keung Hui can be reached at 829-4534 or khui@newsobserver.com.

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