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2002 |
Smith
named school board chair Jeff Smith was
named chairman of the Sisters School Board at the board's annual organizational
meeting on Monday, July 8.
Smith, who has taken a year-long
leave from his college teaching position in California, will lead the
board through the challenging task of building the new Sisters High School.
The board acknowledged some
additional costs in the project, including a water system loop required
by the City of Sisters for fire protection.
Constructing that loop will
cost $85,706. That cost is not included in the "guaranteed maximum price"
for the project.
The district will also need
to seed some areas that were excavated to fill in a deep "borrow pit"
located where playing fields will be sited. The cost of that seeding is
not yet determined.
The ability to seed and irrigate
fields this summer and fall is in question.
The district currently has
no water available to irrigate fields. The board weighed the possibility
of buying water rights -- an expensive option at $4,000 to $6,000 per
acre for 38 acres.
If the state adopts new mitigation
rules, water rights might be available at a much lower cost, but not for
many months -- if at all.
The district could use city
water to irrigate until water rights become available and then switch
to a well and pond arrangement. However, school staff must confirm that
the system designed for the site is compatible with both systems.
Architect Mike Gorman corrected
a mistaken belief that a booster pump needed to use the city system would
be an additional cost. It turned out that that pump was included in the
project budget.
If the district is unable
to seed the fields by the beginning of September, seeding would probably
be delayed until next spring.
That would likely mean the
fields will not be playable until Spring of 2004.
In other business, the board
reviewed an enrollment report for the years 1997 to 2002. The district
ended the year with 1,158 students, up from 1,087 in 1997, but down from
last year's end-of-year number of 1,190.
Middle school and high school
enrollment have grown over the past six years. There were 275 students
at Sisters Middle School in 1997 to 288 in 2002 (end of year). Sisters
High School went from 359 students in May 1997 to 466 in May 2002.
However, both schools saw
a slight drop in enrollment from last year.
Sisters Elementary School
has seen an overall drop in enrollment from 463 in peak years of 1998
and 2000 to 404 as of May 2002.
Board members noted that many
elementary school age children are attending the private Sonrise Christian
School.
The board also directed its
policy subcommittee to review the issues and implications charter schools
with an eye toward developing a general district policy on charter schools.
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