Boston Herald

‘OUR SCHOOL SMELLS LIKE POOP’

Learning jeopardize­d at Dearborn STEM Academy

- By Lance Reynolds lreynolds@bostonhera­ld.com

Inside Dearborn STEM Academy, a $73-million “state-of-the-art facility” that opened in Roxbury in 2018, a “lingering and powerful sewage smell” is wreaking havoc on classes, causing students and teachers to feel ill.

“To be transparen­t, it is the smell of human waste so our school smells like poop,” said Steven Benjamin, a middle school reading specialist and special education teacher.

Benjamin and a pair of colleagues brought the odor, which one of them described as smelling like a “deceased animal,” to light during a School Committee meeting this week as they called on district leadership to step forward to make the miserable experience go away.

The teachers shared their stories the same night that the committee advanced the district’s $1.5 billion budget proposal for next fiscal year. The budget includes a controvers­ial swath of staffing and programmin­g cuts called out by parents and educators.

Dearborn opened to great fanfare in 2018, with the grade 6-12 early college academy marking the first new school constructi­on project in 15 years at the time in the district. Officials hailed the 128,000-squarefoot facility in Roxbury’s Nubian Square as a model for future projects.

But for Benjamin’s thirdfloor classroom to be usable, the door needs to be fully open at all times, an air purifier running with the ionizer on, and windows open which he said resembles the “COVID days.”

Recently, Benjamin said he left for lunch and closed the door, leaving the air purifier running — a step that was not enough to prevent the smell from getting out of hand.

“A half hour later,” he said, “I got back with my students and the smell had built back up and was so foul that they refused to stay in the room, and I couldn’t blame them because it just wasn’t habitable.”

Benjamin taught his students in the hallway before they relocated elsewhere as the smell traveled outside the classroom. It took about 45 minutes for the smell to dissipate, he said.

“To be clear, I am not complainin­g about my school-based custodial and leadership teams,” Benjamin said. “They’ve both been very supportive and responsive. They’ve tried onsite fixes, they’ve communicat­ed to facilities through the proper channels.

“I totally understand that plumbing issues are probably really complicate­d, cannot be fixed right away,” he added, “but this issue has been present the whole year, and we don’t have a permanent fix yet.”

Officials highlighte­d the school, before its opening, as being outfitted with flexible indoor and outdoor learning classrooms, two fabricatio­n labs, a dance studio, a gymnasium, 3D printers, a media center, and laser die cutters as tools.

The facility — with about $37 million of the cost reimbursed by the Massachuse­tts School Building Authority — was the culminatio­n of six years of planning, design and constructi­on, officials praised.

With open, spacious classrooms, the building resembles a college facility and was designed to support the learning that happens inside with its focus on computer science, engineerin­g, health and life sciences and college readiness.

Dearborn features a STEM Tech Career Academy that enables high schoolers to earn associate’s degrees and credential­s in a six-year program focusing on science, technology, engineerin­g, and math fields.

As a tenth-grade science teacher, Julia Kiely said her experience with the stench is even more profound. Kiely’s second-floor room has seven sinks and two floor drains underneath a safety shower.

“Unfortunat­ely, this is a bigger task than anticipate­d,” Kiely added. “The smell is so bad that students say they cannot learn in my classroom, they refuse to enter, and they spray perfumes and Febreze constantly which can further irritate sensitive noses, and they’ll cough and wince throughout class.”

The odor smells the worst on Mondays and Tuesdays after the drains dry up over the weekend, Kiely said. For it to dissipate, she said she runs all seven sinks between 10 and 20 minutes while filling 1,000 milliliter­s of water and pouring them over the drains constantly.

“The smell is unacceptab­le for student learning and my teaching,” Kiely said. “It is so intense that students say they can taste it.”

School Committee Vice Chairman Michael O’Neill is calling for action to be taken as soon as possible, and the timeline in solving the issue to be expedited.

“I hope we’re going to get some very profession­al plumbers out to a (new) building — a matter of fact, let’s get the contractor­s who built the building out there — and find out what the heck is going on there,” he told Superinten­dent Mary Skipper.

Officials have created a project group that has begun looking into the issue, Skipper said, adding Dearborn staff were slated to be updated on the plan by the end of the week.

“We are working, and we have to do testing and when we do the testing it has to be when no one is in the building,” she said. “There is a full group that is on this issue and are aware of this issue.”

A district spokespers­on did not provide the Herald further informatio­n yesterday, with schools closed in observance of Good Friday.

Low concentrat­ions of “sewer gas,” or hydrogen sulfide, can cause irritated eyes, nose, throat, and respirator­y system, while moderate concentrat­ions may lead to headache, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, according to Omega, an environmen­tal management and hazardous materials consulting firm.

High concentrat­ions may cause shock, convulsion­s, inability to breathe, rapid unconsciou­sness, coma, and even death, the firm states.

 ?? LIBBY O’NEILL — BOSTON HERALD ?? The sewage smell inside the Dearborn STEM Academy in Roxbury is overpoweri­ng, students and teachers say.
LIBBY O’NEILL — BOSTON HERALD The sewage smell inside the Dearborn STEM Academy in Roxbury is overpoweri­ng, students and teachers say.

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