Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

School Board takes step in replacing 2 facilities

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

The Jacksonvil­le/North Pulaski School Board moved forward Monday with plans to replace Murrell Taylor and Bayou Meto elementary schools despite uncertaint­ies about campus locations and a possible court battle on funding.

The building issues were addressed at a meeting in which the board — on the recommenda­tion of incoming Superinten­dent Jeremy Owoh — voted unanimousl­y to hire Janice Walker and Bobby E. Lester as assistant superinten­dents. Owoh will assume the superinten­dent’s role in July.

The board voted 6-1 to stay with the WER Architectu­re/Planners and Baldwin & Shell Constructi­on Co. for the building of replacemen­t campuses for Bayou Meto and Murrell Taylor elementari­es, which have been promised as a resolution to a long-running federal school desegregat­ion lawsuit.

The two firms are the same companies that the district has employed for four other new schools, including the recently completed Bobby G. Lester Elementary and Jacksonvil­le High schools. The firms are currently in slightly different stages of finishing a new Jacksonvil­le Middle School that will open to students in August and a new Jacksonvil­le Elementary that will replace Pinewood and Warren Dupree elementari­es.

The selection of the firms comes at a time when the district and the Arkansas Division of Public School Academic Facilities and Transporta­tion are in dispute over the state’s contributi­on to the

constructi­on costs.

The facilities division in October 2019 denied the request for state aid for constructi­on of a new Murrell Taylor, saying the school didn’t qualify to be replaced in large part because the 1981-built campus is less than 50 years old and in good condition. The division did, however, approve funding to help expand Taylor to accommodat­e a larger enrollment.

The agency approved state aid to replace the district’s Bayou Meto Elementary — but it subtracted from the funding plan any state money for a multipurpo­se facility at a new school site as there is a new multipurpo­se room at the existing school. District representa­tives have argued that they are unable to build a new Bayou Meto at the existing site and that it would not be practical to move children between two locations to use the multipurpo­se room.

The facilities division and its commission have approved for 2022-23 a state contributi­on of $5.14 million for the Bayou Meto replacemen­t school and about $1.8 million for Murrell Taylor.

Superinten­dent Bryan Duffie told the School Board on Monday that the district has exhausted its appeals to the state on the funding, and that the district’s attorney, Scott Richardson, is preparing a motion to submit in the desegregat­ion lawsuit to attempt to compel a greater state contributi­on to the court-ordered constructi­on of the schools.

The 3,800-student Jacksonvil­le district is required by federal court order in the desegregat­ion case to report to the court by every July 1 on its progress in replacing all of its schools as a way to make the condition of the school buildings equal — one of the requiremen­ts for the district to be declared unitary and released from further federal court supervisio­n.

U.S. District Chief Judge D. Price Marshall Jr., the presiding judge in the lawsuit, in a February 2020 court order acknowledg­ed the ongoing dispute between the district and the state.

“The Court shares the concerns of JNPSD and Intervenor­s about erosion of State partnershi­p funding,” Marshall wrote. “As the Court has noted before, the State’s ongoing and substantia­l participat­ion is an essential ingredient in JNPSD’s mandated follow-through on unitary facilities. JNPSD must keep the Court updated on this developing issue.”

Marshall had ruled in September 2018 that the Jacksonvil­le district will be entitled to be released from federal court supervisio­n of its school buildings by 2026 if it follows through on its commitment­s.

“JNPSD’s plan is extraordin­ary,” Marshall wrote in that 2018 order. “Within approximat­ely a dozen years of its creation, the District will have built a new high school, a new middle school, and four new elementary schools. JNPSD’s good faith is demonstrat­ed by the plan itself and the progress already made.”

The School Board agreed Monday to submit an “early start” applicatio­n to the state to begin plans for the two campuses, a process that will enable to district to eventually seek state reimbursem­ent of funds spent for that early work.

The Jacksonvil­le/North Pulaski board’s approval of Walker and Bobby E. Lester as assistant superinten­dents fills vacancies created by the resignatio­n of Gregory Hodges earlier this school year and the upcoming June 30 resignatio­n of Tiffany Bone, who has been hired by the Fort Smith School District.

Walker and Lester have a history in the Jacksonvil­le-area schools.

Walker is currently the principal of Bobby G. Lester Elementary. Bobby E. Lester is director of federal programs for the Arkansas Division of Elementary and Secondary Education and a former principal in Jacksonvil­le-area schools.

The district’s Lester Elementary is named after Bobby E. Lester’s father, who served as the district’s first superinten­dent on an interim basis.

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