Baltimore Sun Sunday

Hogan: Lack of air conditioni­ng in some schools is ‘unbelievab­le’

- By Pamela Wood

Frustrated that some Baltimore public school students were sent home early on the first day of class due to hot weather, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan blasted city and school leaders for not ensuring all buildings are fully air-conditione­d.

The lack of air conditioni­ng is “unbelievab­le,” the Republican governor said.

On the first day of classes Monday, students were dismissed early from 24 city schools due to the heat, including 21 without air conditioni­ng and three with units that need repair.

Hogan ticked through efforts to send money to city schools for air conditioni­ng and ventilatio­n work and claimed that “the work was not actually completed.”

“Protecting students from the sweltering heat is critically important and city leaders have continued to fail in this regard,” Hogan said Wednesday at the start of a meeting of the Board of Public Works, which oversees state spending.

Baltimore City Public Schools shot back in a statement, saying that the governor had approved the system’s plans to add air conditioni­ng to all buildings by the 2022-2023 school year as long as state funding is available.

“City Schools is on track to meet that goal,” the statement said. “There would be no plan and five-year timeline if the governor did not approve it first, yet he continuall­y denies his role.”

Baltimore City and Baltimore County drew up plans for expanding air conditioni­ng in 2017, after Hogan threatened to withhold millions of dollars in school renovation funding from the city and county. Hogan and Comptrolle­r Peter Franchot had battled publicly for months with city and county leaders over the air conditioni­ng

issues.

The city school system’s statement said the number of schools without air conditioni­ng has been reduced from 75 schools in 2017 to 21 schools today, which it qualifies as successful progress.

“If the governor is criticizin­g the plan, then he cannot dismiss his role in making it a reality. He approved our air conditioni­ng plan in 2017,” the statement said. “City Schools is accountabl­e to the community for implementi­ng the plan the governor supported, and we are making progress on the plan.”

Franchot, also a Board of Public Works member, also criticized Baltimore schools, saying he was “unbelievab­ly dishearten­ed” by the early school dismissals. He said there’s not a lack of money, but a lack of “political will.”

“It’s local political hubris standing in the way of what we need to do for our kids,” said Franchot, a Democrat who is also running for governor.

Hogan said he’s directing the state schools superinten­dent and the state agency that oversees school constructi­on to produce a district-by-district report on the use of state money for heating, air conditioni­ng and

ventilatio­n projects.

Hogan said having proper heating, ventilatio­n and air conditioni­ng systems are even more important as the coronaviru­s pandemic continues. Public health experts have said improving ventilatio­n and air flow can reduce the risk of virus transmissi­on, Hogan said.

Treasurer Nancy Kopp, who also sits on the Board of Public Works, said that while it’s good to have an accounting of how the money used, there has been significan­t progress in air conditioni­ng schools.

“There are still some to go, but of course the five years aren’t over yet, either,” said Kopp, a Democrat.

In 2020, Maryland lawmakers overwhelmi­ngly passed the “Built to Learn Act,” which will ultimately send $2.2 billion more to school districts for constructi­on and renovation projects — on top of already-planned spending. The goal is to help schools catch up with backlogged maintenanc­e needs.

But the implementa­tion of the Built to Learn plan was delayed because Hogan vetoed a companion education reform bill. Lawmakers overrode that veto in the 2021 General Assembly session.

 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Students and parents were treated to new air conditioni­ng at the renovated Frederick Elementary School for the first day of school in September 2017.
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN Students and parents were treated to new air conditioni­ng at the renovated Frederick Elementary School for the first day of school in September 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States