Date: Fri 09-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 09-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-Fairfield-Hills-school
Full Text:
ED INK: The 5/6 School Decision Must Wait
The Board of Education made its case for a new school for grades five and six
before the Legislative Council this week, and the enrollment statistics
underlying the school board's advocacy of the new $25.8 million facility are
compelling. The school district is expecting the addition of 239 new students
in the system in the coming year, and enrollment projections don't show the
growing school population leveling off any time soon.
Three weeks ago, Superintendent of Schools John Reed painted a grim picture of
the consequences of not building the so-called "5/6 school": split morning and
afternoon school sessions; a school year extended by 27 days; lost
extra-curricular activities; and increased annual costs for teachers'
salaries, transportation, and portable classroom space. From this scenario, it
should be clear to the council and taxpayers that the town will have to
respond with some plan to create new classroom space. The 5/6 school concept
appears to be a reasonable solution.
Having accepted that concept in principle, however, we should not
automatically rush into a $25.8 million building project. Within the next
three months, Newtown will have to make a decision whether or not it should
purchase the 186-acre core campus of the former Fairfield Hills state mental
hospital. Even the most enthusiastic advocates of the Fairfield Hills purchase
admit that the town's need for additional space for offices and other town
functions won't even come close to filling the million square feet in enclosed
space in the buildings at Fairfield Hills. Many of the buildings would have to
be torn down for the town to avoid significant maintenance and liability costs
year after year.
Is one of the buildings at Fairfield Hills suitable for a new school? The
architectural firm Kaestle Boos Associates of New Britain, which wants to
design the new school, has already ruled out the conversion of Watertown Hall,
which the state has conveyed to the town. The architects concluded that the
building is not structurally suited to be a school. But what about one of the
other buildings at Fairfield Hills?
A figure of $20 million for the property purchase and clean-up of toxic
hazards at Fairfield Hills has been put into play by First Selectman Herb
Rosenthal for the purposes of discussion. That figure is conservative and
could drop significantly pending negotiations with the private firm that the
state eventually selects for the possible development and marketing of the
Fairfield Hills property. Once the environmental and demolition costs are
known and an analysis of the economic impact of private development of
Fairfield Hills is done, the best choice for Newtown may indeed be to purchase
the 186-acre property.
If that happens, we certainly don't want to see the spectacle of the town
constructing a $25.8 million school building to gain classroom space just a
brick's throw away from a site where it is spending millions more to tear down
buildings with acres of space in them. The selectmen, the Legislative Council,
and the town as a whole must view the big picture at this point and make the
big decisions first. That means putting off any action on the new 5/6 school
until a final decision is made on the purchase of Fairfield Hills.