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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Double
school move nearly finished Anyone
who has ever moved from one address to another can understand why Sisters
School District facilities manager Bob Martin had concerns about getting
everything transported from the former middle and high schools to the new
locations this summer.
But despite logistical
difficulties and interruptions, the job is largely complete.
At a gathering during
lunch on Friday, July 18, Martin praised his moving crew that includes
six adults and 12 students.
"I'm extremely proud
of the crew and how hard everyone worked," said Martin. "We thought it
would take at least six weeks and we've finished in four and a half."
Superintendent Lynn
Baker echoed Martin's sentiments as he addressed the movers.
"Being new here and
seeing everything that needs to get done to get the school year started,
I appreciate you getting this big job accomplished," he said.
The task was monumental
in that there were so many things to be moved, according to Mim Burke,
who acted as one of the adult supervisors.
"It was tough keeping
the teachers happy," she said.
"They have a lot
things that are very important to them and they want to make sure that
everything's taken care of."
Martin said that
school district employees did a great job of getting everything boxed
up and labeled before the end of the school year, which made the movers'
job much easier.
The crew moved everything
from a baby grand piano to basketballs and found some quirky items along
the way, including an unused, antique toilet seat.
The move allowed
for a certain amount of purging to take place.
"We filled up a number
of huge dumpsters with things that were used up," said one worker.
Burke noted that
communication was the key to making the move happen.
"We had to communicate
well with each other and the many people who were in and out of the building
this summer," she said.
Those people included
the subcontractors doing carpet laying and remodeling, as well as the
hundreds of people who were in the new middle school for classes during
the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show.
The students agreed
that it was hard physical work. Often they had to move things more than
once because the rooms weren't ready.
"We would move it,
load it into the U-Haul, stage it, then move it into where it belonged,"
said student worker Jimmy Hargraves.
He especially remembered
the stout, fireproof filing cabinets.
"Those things were
incredibly heavy," he said.
Martin acknowledged
that the job can't be totally finished until later this summer when all
the flooring and remodeling are actually completed.
"But we're 98 percent
there," he said.
School personnel
will have a couple of days before their regular in-service days in September
to unpack and organize their belongings. |
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