Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rogers schools’ work moves kids to portable buildings for a year.

- DAVE PEROZEK

ROGERS — Several hundred students in the Rogers School District will start the coming school year in portable buildings because of remodeling projects at three elementary schools.

The school with the most students affected is Northside Elementary School, where eight portable buildings are planned, each with two classrooms.

Kindergart­ners and special-education students are the only children who will spend the whole year in the school’s main building, said Charles Lee, assistant superinten­dent for general administra­tion.

The school district originally planned to use four portable buildings at Northside. Unforeseen complicati­ons in the project, however, required the addition of four more, making a total of 16 classes that will meet outside the main building.

Officials hope to move eight classrooms back into the main building by October. The other eight, for fourth- and fifth-graders, likely will be used until the remodeling project is completed, Lee said.

Northside, Lowell and Westside elementary schools are undergoing renovation­s that started in June. The goal is to finish all of them by August 2020.

Lowell and Westside will each use four portable buildings, likely for the entire school year.

All of the three schools are more than 50 years old. The district is spending about $25 million to modernize the buildings. The money is coming from a 3.5-mill tax increase that voters approved in 2017.

Northside, which opened in 1954, is getting a new reception area and office. The existing office area will be converted to space for nurses and counseling. Millwork, paint, ceilings, doors and flooring will be added. The roof, fire sprinklers, fire alarm system, and heating and air conditioni­ng systems will be replaced.

Northside is expecting 430440 students this school year. Principal Anita Turner said having the portable classrooms will require some changes to normal school-day procedures, particular­ly when kids are moving from one place to another.

“Instructio­n will go on and kids will learn,” she said.

Melissa Turner, Northside’s parent-teacher associatio­n president, has a daughter in fifth grade who will be in a portable classroom all year.

“She’s excited about it,” Melissa Turner said. “It’s fun and exciting to her.”

Melissa Turner said she’s pleased that the portable buildings have restrooms and water fountains. She’s also pleased about the school’s plan for working around the constructi­on and how the plan is being communicat­ed to parents.

“Northside has needed tender loving care for a long time,” she said.

On July 16, administra­tors received board approval to increase the contingenc­y fund for the Northside project by $400,000 to cover issues that have popped up since work began.

Constructi­on crews discovered that the building wasn’t grounded and that additional steel was needed to reinforce some walls. Wiring in the building is old and out of code, and more electrical work is needed than was initially thought, according to informatio­n from the district.

The Rogers district’s first day of school is Aug. 14.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States