Calgary Herald

Dozens of projects still unfinished, overbudget in school-build blitz

Years after announceme­nts, informatio­n request reveals delays at 42 of 195

- JANET FRENCH jfrench@postmedia.com

EDMONTON Two years after the provincial auditor chastised the former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government for promising dozens of new schools it couldn’t build on time, at least 42 are still unfinished.

Of 195 constructi­on projects promised by two premiers — the largest new school and modernizat­ion blitz in Alberta’s history — work hasn’t even started on at least six and one was cancelled altogether, an analysis by Postmedia shows.

Furthermor­e, many the projects managed by Alberta Infrastruc­ture are overbudget. Two are more than 20 per cent over the original price. Informatio­n provided by the ministry for 29 of the projects they manage shows 25 of them have cost overruns. (School boards oversee some of their own constructi­on projects, while Alberta Infrastruc­ture takes the lead on others.)

The constructi­on blitz was badly needed and followed a relative drought of infrastruc­ture investment in education, Mary Martin, president of the Alberta School Boards’ Associatio­n, said in a recent interview. It was a steep learning curve for school divisions to manage several constructi­on projects at once, she said.

“Everybody wants to celebrate a new school, especially when there’s been tremendous advocacy and a need demonstrat­ed,” Martin said. “Communitie­s have expectatio­ns that when these announceme­nts are made, there will be a school in the ground, and I think to the greatest extent possible school jurisdicti­ons do a good job.”

Education Minister David Eggen announced in October 2015 after taking office that 101 of the 195 school builds initiated by the previous government were delayed, and asked Alberta’s auditor general to investigat­e.

As of early 2018, 42 of those 101 projects are further delayed, according to data compiled by Postmedia.

The government did not attempt to recoup any money from contractor­s for delays, because the constructi­on contracts contain no financial penalty clauses for lateness, Alberta Infrastruc­ture said.

Every school delay came with a different explanatio­n: A wildfire. A surprise, undergroun­d foundation from decades past. Relentless­ly wet weather. Change of build site. Adding a community hall to the building. A steel shortage. A belated choice to include solar panels.

School divisions can’t sacrifice quality for constructi­on speed, Martin says. These are community investment­s that serve generation­s of families.

“When these schools open, and open well-built, those waits will, I think, fade pretty quickly,” Martin said. “I think kids will be happy to have these spaces — and they are beautiful spaces.”

Eggen said in a February statement his government is cleaning up the “massive backlog ” in school constructi­on the PC government left behind.

“Unlike the previous government, who announced schools without a plan to actually build any of them, we’re putting our money where our mouths are and ensuring that every announceme­nt we make has the funding and the planning attached to lead to a new school opening,” he said.

‘THE SYSTEM FAILED’

In 2012, Alberta’s population was booming, and schools were under pressure. On top of a 2011 commitment to build 35 new schools, then-PC premier Alison Redford campaigned on a promise to build 50 new schools and modernize 70 others within the next four years.

Called the “Phase 2” school build, cabinet ministers announced locations in 2013 and 2014.

In October 2014, then-PC premier Jim Prentice announced “Phase 3” of the school builds, including 55 new builds and 20 modernizat­ions, 70 of which were to be completed by September 2017. Phases 2 and 3 together were to cost $4.6 billion.

By the time the NDP took office in 2015, more than half of the projects were behind schedule.

Auditor general Merwan Saher’s April 2016 report was scathing, saying “the system failed.” Completion dates politician­s promised were unreasonab­le and created false public expectatio­ns. Civil servants failed to tell government its goals were unattainab­le, Saher wrote.

In some cases, the former government announced the projects before checking if the land was available, connected to utilities such as water and sewer, properly zoned, or before determinin­g if environmen­tal and geotechnic­al assessment­s had been done, the auditor said.

Now, the government won’t commit constructi­on funding to a project without these checks first.

Saher said the Tories also neglected to put enough money into the budget to start many of the projects on time.

The NDP government has worked hard in the last three years to fix the issues Saher identified and ensure schools are announced with proper planning in place, said Alex Middleton, who was infrastruc­ture press secretary in February.

Not all the delays were due to issues Saher identified, but some were, he said, although the ministry will not specify how many.

Infrastruc­ture Minister Sandra Jansen said last week she’s taken a special interest in ensuring government projects stick to their schedules.

“If there are significan­t delays, I would have my eye pretty closely on them,” she said.

Cost overruns on some projects are due to unforeseen structural problems or changes to the project, not delays, according to Alberta Infrastruc­ture.

Saher made nine recommenda­tions, all of which the government adopted, Alberta Infrastruc­ture spokeswoma­n Haley Brown said in an email last week.

Divvying up each ministry’s responsibi­lities in a 2017 memorandum of understand­ing was one of the changes. As of March 2018, government also uses a “gated” approval process for school constructi­on, where school districts must provide more detail about the scope, budget, enrolment projection­s, site readiness and other informatio­n before giving them a green light.

As of April 1, 2018, Alberta Infrastruc­ture, rather than Alberta Education, manages all school

constructi­on funding, Brown said.

“As with any major constructi­on project, there are bound to be some delays, but we remain steadfast in our commitment to these communitie­s and families to get these schools open,” Brown said.

Among Saher’s recommenda­tions was for government to improve public reporting on school builds. The department’s projects.alberta.ca website listed 259 school-build projects as of Friday, searchable on a map of Alberta or by municipali­ty. The department said the list is updated monthly.

However, the infrastruc­ture department has a second website, majorproje­cts.alberta.ca, where it also enumerates publicly funded builds, including pipelines, factories, residences, hospitals and more. The 41 schools listed Friday on the “major projects” website have different informatio­n on each project that does not always match the informatio­n on the school “projects” site.

Brown said the “major projects” website is targeted to investors looking for “economic developmen­t opportunit­ies,” and that the province will add a disclaimer to the website to verify the informatio­n with the ministry.

HOW DELAYS HAPPENED

In many cases, needs or situations changed after the government announced the projects and their timelines.

Calgary Catholic Schools had first planned to build the new All Saints High School in the southeast Seton district. When the developmen­t around the school site wasn’t proceeding as quickly as hoped, the board opted to move the school to the Legacy area in Calgary’s south tip, where the site would be serviced sooner, spokeswoma­n Tania Van Brunt said earlier this month.

When Red Deer Public Schools received funding for a new school in the city’s northeast in September 2015, the site wasn’t serviced, spokesman Bruce Buruma said earlier this month.

The board opted to build Don Campbell Elementary School in the city’s southeast instead, he said: “That was not where we originally needed or wanted it.”

First announced in 2014, constructi­on of a new Catholic elementary school in Morinville can’t start until the land is serviced. The former government approved the project without proper planning, Brown said.

Other school districts building on existing sites or modernizin­g buildings had unpleasant surprises.

Although geotechnic­al tests were done on land in the hamlet of Ashmont before work began on a replacemen­t school, workers found a mysterious old building foundation that contained asbestos and needed careful removal, said Doug Fedoruk at the St. Paul Regional Education Division.

In Red Deer, the public school board revisited its already-approved plan to modernize Westpark Middle School when engineers found replacing the building was more cost-effective than renovation. The board took the project to tender twice, because the first set of bids were overbudget, prompting another delay, Buruma said. The provincial government won’t allow district-managed projects to go over budget.

AFTER-THE-FACT ASSESSMENT­S

In Condor, 50 km west of Red Deer, the planned modernizat­ion of David Thompson High School was derailed when the school division learned the nearby sewage lagoon was inadequate, and needed a pricey expansion, Wild Rose school division superinten­dent Brad Volkman said. Geotechnic­al and site surveys were done after government had approved the project in October 2014.

With no level of government willing to upgrade the lagoon, the school division will close the school within four years, Volkman said.

Three-and-a-half years after the government announced the renovation, the school division is back to square one, asking for money to modernize nearby schools instead.

As of September 2017, the government had spent nearly $393,000 planning a renovation that will never happen.

The ordeal left parent Vicki Bradford frustrated. Her sons are in grades 8 and 9 at David Thompson, where the gym ceiling tiles are falling apart. Once, a piece of tile fell on her son’s friend’s head. The state of the gym prevents the school from inviting other teams for volleyball or basketball tournament­s, she said. One frigid day this winter, part of the school had no heat.

“I think politics plays a huge factor in all of this,” Bradford said. “Because we are a rural area, and we all voted Conservati­ve, I think they could care less.”

Some project delays came at a school board’s request — particular­ly in rural communitie­s, where residents fundraised to add community meeting spaces. Such was the case in the Town of Bashaw, where citizens raised more than $1 million to expand the size of a renovated school gym, said Diane Hutchinson, spokeswoma­n for the Battle River School Division.

I think kids will be happy to have these spaces — and they are beautiful spaces.

 ?? LARRY WONG ?? Constructi­on continues this month at Edmonton’s Archbishop O’Leary High School, one of 25 schools across the province which have gone over budget.
LARRY WONG Constructi­on continues this month at Edmonton’s Archbishop O’Leary High School, one of 25 schools across the province which have gone over budget.
 ?? EDWARD DAWSON ?? Then-premier Alison Redford announces a modernizat­ion project at Foothills Composite High School in Okotoks in 2014. Many of the announced projects fell behind schedule or went over budget.
EDWARD DAWSON Then-premier Alison Redford announces a modernizat­ion project at Foothills Composite High School in Okotoks in 2014. Many of the announced projects fell behind schedule or went over budget.

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