Times Colonist

$73.3-million project at Vic High could start in September 2020

- JEFF BELL

The start of a $73.3-million project at the historic Victoria High School could happen in September 2020.

The goal is to complete the job, which will increase capacity and includes a seismic upgrade, in two years. Final consent for the project has not been received from the Ministry of Education.

“Hopefully, we’ll get approval relatively soon,” said Mark Walsh, secretary-treasurer for the Greater Victoria school district.

A scenario that would have seen constructi­on at the Fernwood school start this September was considered optimistic, he said. “That’s what we were gunning for, but we just didn’t get there.”

There are several steps in the overall process, including a now-completed upgrade at the former Burnside Elementary. The upgrade has allowed programs housed at the S.J. Willis Education Centre to be moved there.

And now that S.J. Willis is free for other use, Walsh said, the plan is to upgrade it, as well, and use it as a “swing school” where students can be relocated while their own schools undergo seismic refurbishi­ng. Vic High would be first in line.

Walsh has called the project, which will preserve Vic High’s facade, “one of the most complex seismic upgrades in the history of our province.” The age of the building, which opened in 1914, is part of the reason the work will be complicate­d.

Keith McCallion, a member of the Victoria High School Alumni Associatio­n and a former Vic High principal, said the possible 2020 start date sits well with him.

“I’m pleased because I think it’ll just give more time for really thorough planning and preparatio­n,” he said. “It’ll give them time to get a lot more input from parents and students and the community and, hopefully, the alumni.”

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