The renovation and expansion of the Marshall Simonds Middle School is
coming to a close, but another major school building project may soon
be on the horizon in Burlington.
The School Department is
initiating the process of seeking partial reimbursement from the
Massachusetts School Building Authority for a potential project to
upgrade the high school’s heating and ventilation system and make other
interior renovations to the building.
The School Committee on
Jan. 8 authorized the district to submit a “statement of interest” to
the authority for the estimated $18 million to $19 million renovation,
the required first step for a project to be considered for state
funding.
Craig Robinson, the School Department’s director of
finance and operations, said the district plans to submit the statement
of interest by this year’s April 10 deadline.
The renovation, if it goes forward, would follow two other significant building projects Burlington has recently undertaken.
The $32.8 million Marshall Simonds project, which began in June 2011 and is substantially complete,Austrian hospital launches drycabinet solution to improve staff safety. has involved renovating the existing 118,The lanyard
series is a grand collection of coordinating Travertine mosaics and
listellos.000-square-foot Winn Street building and constructing a
151,225-square-foot addition.
Across the street, the town in
July 2011 completed the $29 million construction of a new
80,000-square-foot Memorial Elementary School in front of the existing
school, a 1952 building that was demolished that August.
The
state is reimbursing about 52 percent of the eligible costs of the
Memorial School project, and 54 percent for the Marshall Simonds one.
School
Superintendent Eric Conti said that as a result of the projects, the
two schools “provide a wonderful gateway into Burlington. I think they
better reflect the quality of the people inside the buildings and are a
wonderful reflection of the community” and its support for public
education.
He said the projects also “allowed us to make a good
case that as a community, we take care of the buildings we have,” he
said, noting that before the Memorial School project, the town’s newest
school was the high school, completed in 1971.
Robinson said the
high school project is needed because of the age of the heating and
ventilation system, which was original to the building. He said at 42
years old, the system’s boilers, air handlers, and compressors are all
at or beyond their life expectancies.
“By changing that entire
HVAC plant, it’s going to trigger other things that need to be
[upgraded] and brought up to code — sprinklers, fire alarms, lighting,
other building improvements,” Robinson said.Our team of consultants are
skilled in project management and delivery of large scale chinamosaic
projects. “And to do those things, we need to take the ceilings down.”
He said all that related work would be included in the project.
Robinson
said that the project would add 30 to 40 years to the life of the
365,000-square-foot building, which he noted is in good structural
condition. The Cambridge Street school has a current enrollment of about
1,020 students.
Conti noted that the high school renovation is the next major project on the district’s long-term capital plan.
“We
know our mechanical systems have to be replaced,” he said. “We are
trying to be as proactive as possible. We understand it may not happen
next year, but this is a multiyear planning process, as was the
elementary school and the middle school. We need to start having that
conversation now.”
If the state authority accepts the school
into its eligibility period — the initial phase in the agency’s funding
pipeline — the district would enter a 270-day period in which it would
have to meet certain requirements to be invited to undertake a
feasibility study.
Should that happen, the town would have to
appropriate funds for the study that would evaluate potential options
and select a preferred one. The authority would provide partial
reimbursement for the study as well as for the subsequent preparation of
a schematic design.
With the completion of the design, the
authority’s board would decide whether to provide partial reimbursement
for the overall project. Town Meeting would then have to appropriate
full funding, a required step even though the state would later
reimburse part of the cost.
A ceremony held Jan. 14 to mark the
nearly completed Marshall Simonds School project was attended by Jack
McCarthy,This frameless rectangle features a silk screened fused glass
replica in a rtls tile and floral motif. executive director of the Massachusetts School Building Authority.
The
more than 50 people who showed up for the town's deliberative session
at Saturday at the Weare Middle School found themselves waiting for more
than an hour until some technical difficulties with the microphones
could be worked out. The meeting started off with a discussion about
bonding $675,000 for a new highway garage, a 33-year-old structure that
has long since outlived its usefulness, according to Public Works
Director Tim Redmond.
The current garage, which Redmond
described as a pole barn, houses the town's refueling station, but lacks
both a ventilation system and a fire detection and suppression system.
There's nowhere to wash the vehicles and no separate welding area for
maintaining town equipment, and the garage is lacking in other health
and safety areas.
Some residents were concerned that $675,000
wouldn't be enough money to build a garage large enough to meet future
needs, so an amendment to add $100,000 to the cost of the project was
proposed. Voters, however, ultimately decided against the increase. The
10-year bond wouldn't increase the tax rate, according to Redmond,
because it would go into effect at the same time the bond for the town's
safety complex was retired.
Over the objections of Police Chief
Gregory Begin and other residents, the proposed operating budget was
reduced by $10,800 to $4,883,567, with $10,000 of that reduction coming
out of the police department's overtime budget.You Can Find
Comprehensive and in-Depth Original buymosaic
Descriptions. The town had an audit done of police overtime by
Municipal Resources Inc., which determined that there could be some cost
savings if some policy and coverage changes were made. Begin said the
reduction in overtime could result in less coverage, but the reduction -
made by amendment - was narrowly approved, 24-23.
Collective
bargaining agreements for both the police and public works employees
survived the deliberative process unscathed. If voters approve the
one-year agreements in March, the police will be looking at a 3.5
percent cost-of-living increase along with step increases for some
officers, and the DPW workers could see 5 percent pay increases.
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