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Public weighs in on elementary school options

by Jeremy Weber Hungry Horse News
| February 20, 2019 7:52 AM

The public weighed in on options for School District 6 elementary schools, with a contingent saying that it’s a tough sell as long as Canyon Elementary remains empty.

The district is eyeing options that would cost between $29 million and $34 million to renovate Ruder Elementary and Glacier Gateway Elementary and while possibly selling Canyon Elementary, which hasn’t housed students for years.

The impact on taxpayers varies depending on the options. The current junior high bond has taxpayers paying $80.97 per year on a home assessed for $200,000. If passed by the voters, the $29 million option would raise that amount to $209.10, or an increase of $128.13 per year. The $34 million option would cost a home assessed for $200,000 about $237.36 per year, or an increase of $156.39.

The district hasn’t settled on an option yet.

The crowd at a forum last week heard from Superintendent Steve Bradshaw, Glacier Gateway Principal Penni Anello and Ruder Elementary Principal Brenda Krueger on reasons why the district is in need of new elementary facilities and while most in the crowd were in agreement with the speakers, there were those who felt differently.

The degrading state of the Glacier Gateway School and overcrowding continued to be cited as the main reasons the district is considering the bond, but the main argument against new construction continued to be the Canyon Elementary School that sits unused by the district in Hungry Horse.

Bradshaw opened the meeting by once again reiterating that Glacier Gateway and Ruder are structurally sound, but both are in need of a number of repairs and upgrades.

“Our buildings have been well maintained. We’ve gotten a bang for our buck in every building that we have in this school district. Our custodians and maintenance people work extremely hard to keep the buildings clean and looking nice. When you walk down our hallways, you can’t see what is going on behind the walls, and that’s the frightening part,” Bradshaw said. “Our problem is not necessarily overcrowding. We could somehow work through that over the next five years. This is about the shape that our buildings are in. This is about the fact that we have one thermostat in Glacier Gateway that actually works, among other things.”

While there is a permissive levy in place that gives the school $165,000 for maintenance and repairs each year, the needs of the schools is far above what the levy could fund.

While most in attendance supported the more expensive option of demolishing Glacier Gateway to build an entirely new facility there, Marion K. Foley of Martin City said taxpayers in the Canyon would not be as supportive.

“There is a relatively new building with a gym with great access and aesthetics is sitting empty in Hungry Horse. I don’t think you will get any support for this bond coming from people in the Canyon,” she said. “I have to make it really strong and clear to this group that the Canyon is not going to support something if there isn’t a good discussion of how it is inclusive of them. There are a lot of property owners in the Canyon and you need those property owners’ votes to pass a bond.”

The district is still considering what to do with the Canyon facility, parts of which are currently being rented by the County Health Board as a community health clinic.

“We’ve been talking with the county health department and we would love to see them purchase the building, in all honesty. We have also had people saying we should turn it into a community center, but the school cannot afford to do that. I would love to see a Boys and Girls club up there, but the decision of what to do with the building is up to the board,” Bradshaw said.

In a current online survey being conducted by the district on its website, 46 of those who have responded say they would not send their children to the Canyon school if it were to reopen while 42 say they would.

The principals of both Columbia Falls elementary schools were given the chance to explain the needs of their two campuses, both listing a number of maintenance and space needs.

Krueger cited a number of space and security concerns at Ruder, including one kindergarten educator who is having to use a entranceway as a classroom because of limited space in the school. The class is taught at least four times a week in a space where no chairs or desks are allowed, because it would be a fire code violation. Krueger also pointed out that state standards allow no more than 26 students per classroom in the fifth grade for the school to receive accreditation, but one future class could have more than 30 if more space is not found.

Anello said matters are worse at Glacier Gateway, where a non-functional HVAC unit leaves the students breathing stale, uncirculated air in rooms where temperature control is tricky at best. While she said that she loves teaching in the old building, a new facility would be quite welcome.

“Glacier Gateway is historic and I love it. But it’s not the building I love, it’s the kids and the process that happens between the walls,” she said. “Providing an environment where that process can be more effective, that’s what I am all about.”

Many in the crowd echoed her sentiments, with one parent going so far as to say that she didn’t care what facility her children were taught in, she cared about the hearts of the people that were teaching them.

Another issue the bond is meant to address is security at the entrances of both elementary schools and the Junior High.

“The last thing I would want before I retire is for an active shooter to hit one of our buildings,” Bradshaw said. “When you have to deal with car wrecks, suicides and cancers every year, those are tough enough. As close-knit as this community is, I can’t imagine what it would be like if we had to deal with an active shooter. The bottom line is that new security doors at each of the schools could save lives.”

The District 6 Planning Committee will meet several more times before the issue is put to a vote in September.

“The education of every child in this community is critical, as it is in every community. Our republic is built on an educated group of people and we can’t afford to not educate our children. This community and this group of teachers does what they can do to educate every child. I can assure you that the facilities where they are doing it make a difference,” Bradshaw said. “I don’t have the answers because there are no easy answers to the issues we are facing right now. In the end, this is a community decision and I hope the community takes this seriously and makes the right choice.”