Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Session focuses on district properties

Board discusses potential selling, repurposin­g of school land, buildings

- MARY JORDAN

SPRINGDALE — The School Board discussed Wednesday how the district may most-efficientl­y use some of its properties and buildings.

About 14 board and district staff members attended the work session, which included a visit to several properties the district may want to take off its books and a discussion about repurposin­g an elementary school.

“It’s just the start of the conversati­on,” said Jared Cleveland, superinten­dent, noting no formal decisions have been made to sell or repurpose any district properties.

Selling possibly unneeded property may allow the district to invest sale proceeds into future building projects, Cleveland said.

Among the properties the district may want to consider selling are .92 acres at 1600 Butterfiel­d Coach Road the district purchased for $20 in 1890, 1.3 acres on the corner of corner of South Daylilly Trail and North Old Wire Road purchased for $10 in 2017 and 1.18 acres at 800 E. Emma Ave. purchased for $3,000 in 1922, according to meeting documents.

Several properties that were donated to the district are also under considerat­ion for potential sale, Cleveland said.

The properties include 15.55 acres at the corner of Brush Creek and Downum roads, 6.68 acres on the easternmos­t lot of Bitter Lane,

13.42 acres on the corner of Dodd and Old Wire roads and 4.52 acres on the center lot of Bitter Lane, according to meeting documents.

Cleveland asked the board to also consider possibly repurposin­g Lee Elementary School, 400 Quandt St., for use as something other than a school to allow the district to consolidat­e staff from several district satellite administra­tive buildings into one location.

Lee was built in 1951 and is the district’s oldest and smallest school at 46,761 square feet, Cleveland said. The school is also landlocked, which prevents any further growth for the building, he said.

The building’s limitation­s will soon make it too out-ofdate to be a functional school, said Justin Swope, Lee principal.

“I think it makes perfect sense,” said Randy Hutchinson, board vice president. “I love Lee, but it probably needs to be repurposed.”

In the event Lee is repurposed, Cleveland said the school’s approximat­ely 400 kindergart­en through fifth-graders may be absorbed into Monitor, Bayyari, Linda Childers Knapp, Jones and George elementary schools.

“Those schools could accept those students without really having to do anything,” Cleveland said.

Other options for district students include opening a new elementary school on the corner of East Fletcher

Avenue and South Barrington Road in Tontitown, he said.

The approximat­ely 90,000-square-foot building is estimated to cost about $21.5 million to complete and will serve some 820 students from kindergart­en through fifth grade, Cleveland said.

Constructi­on on the school is set to begin in October and could conclude as early as August, he said, adding he’d want to repurpose Lee and open the Tontitown school at about the same time.

Swope expressed confidence in the staff and students of Lee to make it through any potential transition­s.

“We can do this,” Swope said. “That’s the school mantra.”

Next steps for the district include assessing the properties and examining the legalities of any potential sales, Cleveland said.

“We just have to look into every single piece in its own way, because each piece could have to be addressed differentl­y,” he said.

District staff is apt to have some sound answers for the board’s decision making in December or January, Cleveland.

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