The Day

Backup flushes staff from offices

Sewage once again forces Norwich school employees to relocate

- By CLAIRE BESSETTE

Norwich — The $385 million school constructi­on project can’t come soon enough for the staff at the school central offices in the former John Mason School at the Norwichtow­n Green.

For the third time this school year, central office staff members were forced to relocate to various school buildings, go to McDonald’s restaurant next door or the Samuel Huntington School down the road to use the bathroom. The sewer line beneath the basement and rear parking lot was clogged again, Superinten­dent Kristen Stringfell­ow said Friday afternoon.

The old sewer line beneath the parking lot becomes clogged with tree roots, Stringfell­ow said, and sometimes the building’s antiquated pipes become clogged with items flushed down the toilets. Luckily, Stringfell­ow said, the staff get enough warning when water starts bubbling up through the basement floor. Immediatel­y, staff are told they cannot use the building’s bathrooms.

“McDonald’s has been a very good neighbor to us,” Stringfell­ow said of the restaurant directly across New London Turnpike from the central office building.

Maintenanc­e staff first try to clear clogs with a plumbing snake, but if that doesn’t work, they must call a plumber. If the work will take more than an hour, the scramble begins, Stringfell­ow said. She calls various schools to see what office space might be available on short notice.

The school registrati­on office, located in the basement level of central office, shuts down for the day, and most office secretarie­s are sent home, because the city’s cramped schools do not have the space to accommodat­e them, Stringfell­ow said.

Voters in November approved a $385 million school constructi­on project that calls for building four new elementary schools to replace seven elementary schools and moving central offices and adult education to the Huntington School. New schools on the grounds of the former Greenevill­e School and the grounds of the current John Moriarty and John B. Stanton schools are planned for the first phase of the project.

Next week, Stringfell­ow will write a letter to School Building Committee Chairman Mark Bettencour­t to ask if central offices could move temporaril­y into one of the vacated school buildings once the first new school is completed.

Bettencour­t said Friday the idea would require some research and could not be paid for using bonding money for the project, since a temporary move of central office was not in the concept plan.

But vacated school buildings would still be in the control of the school system until they no longer are needed for education purposes, Bettencour­t said.

The entire project is before the state legislatur­e this spring for approval of state funding and the state reimbursem­ent rate. State Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague, is working to try to boost the city’s reimbursem­ent rate from 67% to 80% for much of the project.

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