The Commercial Appeal

Report: Schools need $9B for infrastruc­ture

Tennessee panel raises estimate from a year ago

- Marta W. Aldrich

Tennessee needs to invest more than $9 billion in its K-12 education infrastruc­ture over five years, an increase of nearly 9% from an assessment done a year earlier, a new state report says.

Of that amount, about $5.4 billion is needed for renovation­s and technology improvemen­ts, while nearly $3.6 billion is needed to build additions and new schools, according to the Tennessee Advisory Commission on Intergover­nmental Relations.

The report, approved recently by the commission, comes as local and state officials grapple with how to cover the soaring costs of school constructi­on, which have doubled in the last decade due to rising material and labor costs.

Meanwhile, years of research shows that fixing school buildings can improve student learning, health and behavior. One study in Tennessee shows a direct connection between student achievemen­t and the condition of school buildings. Another study from New York found that poor building conditions can lead to higher rates of chronic absenteeis­m.

In Tennessee, cities and counties pay for most of their school facility needs with property and sales tax revenues. But some state lawmakers are looking for ways to ease that burden.

Last year, one legislativ­e proposal would have directed tax revenues from Tennessee’s new sports betting industry toward local school facility costs. But the measure fizzled in committee as legislator­s opted to keep most of that money — at least for now — for higher education scholarshi­ps, such as the state’s popular HOPE and Tennessee Promise programs.

This year, new legislatio­n to eliminate state mandates on class sizes — if approved — could slow the need for new schools and additions.

But many local officials would prefer a new state revenue stream to help them repair or replace aging schools.

Miska Clay Bibbs, a former school board member in Memphis who was elected last year to the Shelby County Commission, said a broader conversati­on is overdue. At least 33 Memphis schools were built before 1950.

“Not only is Memphis-shelby County Schools the state’s largest school district, but most of our school buildings are some of the oldest,” said Clay Bibbs. “These buildings don’t mirror the greatness of the students, teachers and families that these schools represent.

“It makes for a difficult learning environmen­t,” she said.

Tennessee needs 70 more schools

The inventory compiled by the state commission, which reports directly to the legislatur­e, serves as a yearly reminder of Tennessee’s billions of dollars in unmet capital constructi­on needs — from schoolhous­es and roads to bridges and water lines. The report has been compiled every year since 1998 and has become an important tool to identify critical needs and set state priorities in the budget-making process.

The latest needs list tallied $63 billion in all, with education ranking second again, behind transporta­tion and just ahead of health and safety infrastruc­ture needs such as clean water, law enforcemen­t, fire protection, and public health.

In the education category, college campuses saw a decrease in their infrastruc­ture needs after several years of new investment­s, while K-12 public schools saw their needs increase.

To keep on track, local officials reported needing to build 70 more schools across Tennessee, at an average estimated cost of $42 million each. That amount can vary widely, however, depending on the school’s size, location, and purpose. For instance, Sullivan County’s new high school cost $75 million, while a new K-8 school in Lincoln County came in at $17 million.

Rep. David Hawk, a Republican from Greenevill­e, said his local school district is staring at a $50 million price tag to build a new middle school in Upper East Tennessee. He added that something has got to give.

“Brick and mortar for education is one of the largest costs to local government­s, which go into substantia­l debt to build schools to meet state mandates,” said Hawk.

For much of his 20-year legislativ­e career, Hawk has looked for a way to direct state funds to build schools, and he sponsored last year’s failed bill to use sports betting revenue for that purpose. He doesn’t plan to file a similar bill this year but says he wants to continue to “push the envelope.”

“We can and should do more,” Hawk said.

Sen. Jon Lundberg says infrastruc­ture challenges aren’t the impetus for his bill this year to eliminate Tennessee’s maximum class size requiremen­ts of 25 students in kindergart­en through third grades, 30 students in grades 4-6, and 35 students in grades 7-12.

“My goal is not to create larger class sizes; it’s just to give localities more discretion when there are extenuatin­g circumstan­ces, such as when a classroom has teacher aides,” Lundberg said. “The state would still put out best practices on optimum class sizes.”

But the Bristol Republican, who chairs the Senate Education Committee, acknowledg­ed that such a change could also have the unintended effect of lessening pressure on local government­s to build new schools or additions as their student population­s grow.

“It’s possible,” he said. “My expectatio­n is that locally elected leaders will do what’s right.”

Last August, the collapse of a school library ceiling at one school — when school was in session — underscore­d the importance of addressing longstandi­ng capital needs in Memphis-shelby County Schools.

No students were in the library at the time at Cummings K-8 Optional School, but the school librarian and two other staff members were injured. All students will finish out this school year at a neighborin­g school pending repairs and the outcome of a structural review.

According to the state’s latest breakdown of local needs, Memphis-shelby County Schools needs to address school infrastruc­ture projects totaling more than $464 million, at a cost of $3,450 per student, by mid-2026.

But funding is a challenge. Last summer, Shelby County commission­ers granted only half of the Memphis district’s $55 million request for capital improvemen­ts, putting several major projects on hold, including a replacemen­t building for Trezevant High School in the city’s Frayser community.

Interim Superinten­dent Toni Williams is compiling a new capital improvemen­t plan to bring before the commission this year. But Clay Bibbs, who chairs the Shelby County Commission’s education committee, says relief from the state could expedite improvemen­ts.

“Imagine if we had more dollars to take on more projects. Change could happen faster,” she said.

Tennessee received over $4 billion from three federal COVID relief packages, but Gov. Bill Lee and GOP leaders encouraged school districts to use at least half of their portions on programs and resources to help their students catch up academical­ly from the pandemic.

Districts spent much of the early funds on technology upgrades like digital tablets. Some used part of their later funds to upgrade ventilatio­n, heating, and air conditioni­ng systems in school buildings. However, much of that spending was not captured in the latest state report, which gives a snapshot of infrastruc­ture needs as of July 2021.

“We might see a drop in some of those areas next year,” said Tyler Carpenter, the commission’s research manager and the report’s co-author.

The governor has said he’ll prioritize Tennessee’s transporta­tion infrastruc­ture backlog this year. He is expected to unveil his proposed state budget for the 2023-24 fiscal year on Feb. 6.

Marta Aldrich is a senior correspond­ent and covers the statehouse for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Contact her at maldrich@chalkbeat.org.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educationa­l change in public schools.

 ?? CASSANDRA STEPHENSON/THE TENNESSEAN ?? Lakeview Elementary School would be reconstruc­ted from the ground up for $39.3 million in Nashville Mayor John Cooper’s capital spending proposal.
CASSANDRA STEPHENSON/THE TENNESSEAN Lakeview Elementary School would be reconstruc­ted from the ground up for $39.3 million in Nashville Mayor John Cooper’s capital spending proposal.

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