Lodi News-Sentinel

Baltimore kids miss nearly 1.5M hours of class time because of poor facilities

- By Liz Bowie

BALTIMORE — Baltimore students collective­ly have missed nearly 1.5 million hours of class time over the past five years — equal to about 221,000 school days — when schools close because their buildings are too cold or hot, a pipe has broken or an electrical problem has developed, according to a team of Johns Hopkins University researcher­s.

Most of those closings have happened in the past couple of years after the school system put in more stringent policies to ensure that students were not learning in buildings that were too cool or too warm. During the winter of 2018, dozens of schools were closed during a cold snap when school heating systems failed. And schools have closed more frequently in the past year when temperatur­es in classrooms have risen and the school system decided to release students due to lack of air conditioni­ng.

The Hopkins researcher­s said the project was an attempt to quantify the effect of poor facilities on students.

“We think that this is a core issue of equity in the city. Kids should be able to go to school in a healthy environmen­t,” said Dr. Josh Sharfstein, a professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and one of the authors. “Obviously, there is an urgent need for improvemen­t for the environmen­t in many city schools.”

The report, released Tuesday, used data from the city schools and state sources to paint a detailed portrait of the issues at each school, and what researcher­s say is the result of the failure to provide sufficient funding.

For instance, the city government has given far less each year for school facilities than other neighborin­g counties. Baltimore County budgeted more than $200 million last year for its school buildings, while the city government put in about $11 million. Under a special initiative, Baltimore has built 14 new schools to replace dilapidate­d ones in the past five years, but it isn’t nearly fast enough to keep up with the backlog of needs at its crumbling buildings.

The state rates only 17% of the city’s schools as in good or excellent condition, compared with more than 90% in Howard County and more than 60% in Baltimore County.

There isn’t enough money to maintain city school buildings, so the result is that only the most pressing problems are addressed each year, said Alison Perkins-Cohen, Baltimore City schools chief of staff.

Researcher­s found 80% of closures are due to heating and cooling problems. A review of maintenanc­e requests found 29 schools have HVAC systems with parts that more than 20 years past their replacemen­t date.

Perkins-Cohen said that just to bring the Baltimore Polytechni­c Institute and Western High School complex on Falls Road at Cold Spring Lane up to date with new HVAC, windows and other systems would cost $75 million, more than double the amount of money the city schools receive from the state in one year.

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