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New Elementary School. Litchfield School District Building Proposal. Where we are now & how we got here. 1930: GMS opens, 4 classrooms 1955: 4 classrooms added 1958: 2 classrooms added 1960: 4 classrooms added 1972: 9 classrooms, gym, offices 1978: 5 classrooms, library, cafeteria
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New Elementary School Litchfield School District Building Proposal
1930: GMS opens, 4 classrooms • 1955: 4 classrooms added • 1958: 2 classrooms added • 1960: 4 classrooms added • 1972: 9 classrooms, gym, offices • 1978: 5 classrooms, library, cafeteria • 1983: 3 classrooms • 1984: Grades 1-8 = 643 students • 1988: LMS opens - 300 student capacity • 9 regular classrooms • 2 science rooms • 4 rooms (music, art, FACS, tech ed) • 2 sped rooms A Lot of History
2004: School bond fails • GMS repairs • New smaller school • 2005: School bond fails • 1 large school • 2006: School bond fails (smaller than ’05) • 1 large school • 2006: School board re-vamps building committee • No school board voting members • 5 community members volunteer • SAU & school board liaisons • 2008: upcoming bond vote Recent history
Building Committee Members2006-2007 Voting members (*) reside in Litchfield • Tracy Caprioglio*, Chair • Mike Boschi*, Vice-chair • Karl Franck* • Jack Scheiner* • Shawn Egan* • Cathy Hamblett – SAU Liaison • Steve Martin – SAU Liaison • Cindy Couture – School Board Liaison • Bo Schlichter – GMS Liaison • Dan Cecil – Architect All school board members are Litchfield residents
What’s the problem? There’s a real need for: newer, modern educational spaces ADA & building code compliance solving the water problem standards compliance kindergarten space energy efficiency storage space
What options were considered ? • Renovate GMS with an addition • The roof on GMS could not handle the weight of a second story addition • Restrictions on state building aid • Renovate GMS with a new small school • construction costs alone were higher than a one school option • Restrictions on state building aid • Replace GMS with a new larger school • Least expensive option • No questions on state building aid • One elementary school to maintain • No state building aid for GMS site new construction • Kindergarten space
So what’s the repair list and associated costs? • The list is extremely detailed and too large to list here (copies available) • Major items • Stop ALL use of the 1930’s building • New HVAC systems • New electrical and lighting • Central dehumidification (attempt to resolve humidity issue) • New windows and doors • ADA code compliance • New insulation above ceilings • Additional roof support (snow load bearing) • Septic system life unknown • Total: $10.5 million to “revitalize” GMS • Average $150,000 per year in repairs
OK, $10+ million is still less than a new school • Repairs would update the physical systems in the building • Repairs do not address the educational shortcomings of the building (no movement of walls, etc) • Designed for 401 students • Special Ed student spaces not appropriate • 1930’s building usability ( 4 classrooms + storage lost) • Classroom square footage restrictions • Technology un-friendly • Lack of storage
Can’t we renovate GMS? • Renovation has to meet State Department of Education specifications • Square footage per student • Reduces the capacity of GMS even further • State Department of Education won’t provide building aid for ANY NEW construction on the GMS site • Still have the water issue to solve for state aid availability • Where to put the students while work progresses? • Can’t do the work in phases • Costs could approach new construction costs • Still requires additional new construction
Proposal Overview • Use district owned land next to LMS • Dry, excellent soils for construction • No land acquisition costs • Classroom capacity for 705 students at opening • 625 students in grades 1-5 • 80 ½ day kindergarten students • Cafeteria and Library designs easily expanded to accommodate any future growth • Initial size reduced by educational spaces • State Building Aid • 30% reimbursement for grade 1-5 areas • 75% reimbursement for kindergarten areas • Durable, modern and energy efficient • Cost effective for long & short term • Provides “breathing room” given the current 10 year enrollment projections
Kindergarten Impact Construction : $1,141,800 Administrative: $ 252,990 Fees/Services: $ 116,000 Sub-total: $1,510,790 75% state aid: $1,133,093 District cost: $ 377,697 Impact Fees: $ 377,697 Net cost $ 0
What about my taxes over 15 years? 15 year bond @ 5% $300,000 home: Year 1 = $132 Year 2 = $429 Year 3 = $429 Year 2 is the highest tax impact Total taxes over 15 years: $6345 $400,000 home: Year 1 = $176 Year 2 = $572 Year 3 = $572 Year 2 is the highest tax impact Total taxes over 15 years: $8460
What about my taxes over 20 years? 20 year bond @ 5% $300,000 home: Year 1 = $138 Year 2 = $366 Year 3 = $366 Year 2 is the highest tax impact Total taxes over 20 years: $7068 $400,000 home: Year 1 = $184 Year 2 = $488 Year 3 = $488 Year 2 is the highest tax impact Total taxes over 20 years: $9424
Putting it into perspective.. $1.57/day $1.80/day For coffee $1.70/day For cable TV $2.15/day Movies -1/month
Next Steps • Get community members involved! • Public forums • GMS “Behind the Scenes” Tours • Host a neighborhood/group meeting • Send postcards • Adopt a sign • Flyer distribution • Voting day support • Letters to the editor • HLN • Nashua Telegraph • Manchester Union Leader • Provide your email address • Forward communications to friends • Upcoming events
Unanswered questions • What will happen to GMS ? • Need community input • Public forums • Questionnaires • Surveys • Stay sensitive to town master plan and zoning • Obtain an updated appraisal • “Best use” might be residential housing • Sports fields? • Remain in use during construction • School board is sensitive to usage • We have 2 years to determine the best solution