The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Unreal’: Schools run behind on maintenanc­e

No restroom soap, open requests from 2015 are among the deficienci­es.

- By Marlon A. Walker marlon.walker@ajc.com

LaTonya Hill is certain her classroom is making her sick.

The Dresden Elementary School special education teacher has spent more than two weeks out of her classroom battling sinus and upper respirator­y infections she said were not common before she began working at the school in 2016. At first, she attributed the health problems to working with children who carry a lot of germs. She spent two weeks on bed rest after her second upper respirator­y infection of the school year, which began in August. She said she is worried about mold.

“I’ve never had all these problems, and there doesn’t seem to be much (school administra­tors) can do about it,” said Hill, adding she was advised by school officials to wear a surgical face mask to work.

Of the school’s 29 active maintenanc­e requests, reported to the school district’s operations division, nine are for leaks in class- rooms and hallways, or for standing water.

Metro Atlanta schools have more than 10,000 school maintenanc­e requests for hundreds of school buildings across the region, anything from major overhauls for heating and cooling systems to needing soap and other supplies in a school lavatory. The repairs

often take a backseat to competing priorities as teacher salaries, retirement benefits and growing administra­tive staffs take a large chunk of the annual budget, forcing districts to use special, voter-approved tax pots for much-needed maintenanc­e and renovation.

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on requested lists of active facilities maintenanc­e requests from the largest metro Atlanta school districts. Across the region, still-active maintenanc­e requests vary in size, scope and length of wait. Discarded furniture placed at the back door of Clayton County’s Arnold Elementary School on July 23 needs to be cleaned up. On Oct. 10, someone from DeKalb County’s Sequoyah Middle School requested a mason to patch a wall hole with concrete after a rat ate through the wall. Also on Oct. 10, a leak was reported in the gym at Gwinnett County’s Archer High School.

Elia Kelley, whose daughter attends DeKalb County’s Dunwoody Elementary School, said she did not understand why the school had no soap in its lavatories.

“It’s unreal, so unacceptab­le,” Kelley said. “You’re spreading germs, and it’s flu season. Basic needs aren’t being met.”

In late October, DeKalb County School District operations employees were contending with nearly 7,000 facilities maintenanc­e requests. Several thousand of the requests were biannual requests seeking supplies and to check exhaust fans and water heaters. Many were about leaking roofs and air conditioni­ng issues. Interim Chief Operations Officer Dan Drake said requests are prioritize­d into three categories, the lowest of which should be handled within seven days.

The oldest active maintenanc­e request was annual water heater checks scheduled for July 19, 2017. That’s 483 days ago.

“We’re actively addressing that,” Drake said last month.

Drake said the backlog is a combinatio­n of several things, including work orders being cleared before the work is done, regular maintenanc­e requests and items already addressed but not cleared from the system. He said a data-driven approach to handling maintenanc­e requests should help the district better prioritize requests as they come in and update the current list of outstandin­g work orders.

And he’s going to hold his staff accountabl­e for updated lists and clearing maintenanc­e requests faster.

“I’m putting a lot more attention to ... a decentrali­zed process,” Drake said. “I have a hot list of 26 members who are not actively using their phones, and mandatory training set up for them to make sure they’re using the technology. There will be consequenc­es ... for them not using their phones. That’s for both facilities maintenanc­e, contractor­s and plant engineers. I’m asking the regional facilities managers, getting monthly reports to shore up open work orders. Now that they know I’m looking at it, and our facilities administra­tive staff is looking at it, there’s going to be some accountabi­lity baked into that.”

Cobb County Schools has open maintenanc­e requests going back to 2015, including one on Feb. 5, 2015, about a leak in a transporta­tion pump.

“With over 150 technician­s, CCSD Maintenanc­e maintains 113 schools and 17 support facilities and receive over 52,000 work orders a year,” the district said in a statement. “Our support staff make sure less than 3 percent are open at any given time.”

On Oct. 24, Cobb County Schools had 1,583 school maintenanc­e requests, more than 3 percent of the annual number. District officials did not respond to questions about school maintenanc­e requests, including the length of time it takes for some requests to be addressed.

Most school districts returned maintenanc­e informatio­n within hours, or days. Fulton County Schools officials said it would take two to three weeks to produce records, for $59. Atlanta Public Schools did not return documents requested through its new open records portal.

Clayton County Public Schools has put pressure on itself to shore up any maintenanc­e requests that have languished for long periods of time. Since late spring, the district has addressed more than 11,000 requests, prioritizi­ng based on those that impact student safety.

“Our expectatio­n ... is they’re done within a day or two,” said Kemith Thompson, the district’s executive director of operations. “And with an aging infrastruc­ture, we might have to order parts that might take weeks or months. Then, there are life safety events that might prevent us from finishing low-priority (requests).”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? A constructi­on dumpster and covered materials sit outside Dresden Elementary School on Monday in Chamblee. Of the school’s 29 active maintenanc­e requests, nine are for leaks in classrooms and hallways, or for standing water.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM A constructi­on dumpster and covered materials sit outside Dresden Elementary School on Monday in Chamblee. Of the school’s 29 active maintenanc­e requests, nine are for leaks in classrooms and hallways, or for standing water.

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