The Nome Nugget

• Diomede city building

-

tion from Fairbanks, and a contractor with Passive Homes, who has worked at Diomede before, and Gary Eckenweile­r, the BSSD director of maintenanc­e.

McKnight said in an interview with the Nugget that the school building at the time of the assessment has incurred only minimal damage but that the city’s building continues to move downhill and is pinching more and more on the school. “Secondly, we determined that the city building was not salvageabl­e,” McKnight said. It was too heavily damaged to be salvaged. The plan now is to stabilize the building to keep it from moving any further into the school building. “And then we’re working with the state and other agencies to find funding for the removal of the building and overlook the stabilizat­ion of the site,” McKnight said.

While the engineers left again on Sunday, a local work force of eight use materials that were on the island already to stabilize the city building. Heavy beams already on the island for other building projects could be used to prop up the leaning office building. Ozenna described the stabilizat­ion looking like “jenga blocks” underneath the building. Once the building is deemed stable, everything will have to be moved out of the offices before it will be deconstruc­ted. The building houses city offices, the Fire Department and the Post Office. A temporary post office was establishe­d at the old clinic building so that the postal service can be re-establishe­d to allow the flow of mail again.

Superinten­dent Nedza said that the school district will send an engineer out to Diomede for an assessment of the school’s integrity once the city building is dismantled. “Then we make an official ruling as far as safety and reopening, but we need that building removed first, which we expect, hopefully, by Christmas time. And then we’re hopeful that by the end of January, we can be reopened.”

Nedza added that Senator Donny Olson and Representa­tive Neal Foster have been helpful. “They reached out to the governor. And that’s how we got some of this quick assistance,” Nedza said.

Nedza added that the meal service had been interrupte­d and that the district’s food services has been working to get shelf safe meals to Diomede since nobody can cook in the school and provide breakfast and

lunch.

However, the hard work of stabilizin­g the building, removing the contents of the offices, and carefully dismantlin­g the building is still ahead as winter and stormy weather is approachin­g.

McKnight said the city building weighs about 100 tons and it is crucial that it gets dismantled before a snow and iceload weighs it down even more and adds to the pressure on the school building. The goal is to have it de-constructe­d by Christmas. “It’s not like we have a lot of choice on the timeline,” said McKnight. “This is something that needs to be addressed sooner than later, because it’s only going to get worse.”

While they are dealing with this situation first, the underlying cause needs to be addressed in the future. “My opinion is that permafrost, which is what the buildings are sitting on, is degrading, which means it’s weakening, and this process has been accelerate­d by warming temperatur­es,” said McKnight. “There are half a dozen buildings or more on Diomede that are seeing this type of distress.” The school building is one of those, but the school district has been diligent on keeping the foundation

of their school building in good repair, he said. But the degradatio­n of permafrost, caused by a warming climate, will put more buildings in danger on Diomede. “We’re seeing other buildings on Diomede that need attention,” said McKnight.

Last year, Ozenna said, Diomede unsuccessf­ully applied for grants to replace the building, as it is over four decades old. She said they had plans and designs done but the funding was denied.

“Maybe this will change it now,” she said.

 ?? Photo courtesy Frances Ozenna ?? BEYOND SALVAGE— Engineers deemed the city building beyond salvage. Workers are now stabilizin­g the structure before it is safe to enter and remove all office contents. Once the building is empty, it will be dismantled.
Photo courtesy Frances Ozenna BEYOND SALVAGE— Engineers deemed the city building beyond salvage. Workers are now stabilizin­g the structure before it is safe to enter and remove all office contents. Once the building is empty, it will be dismantled.
 ?? Photo courtesy Frances Ozenna ?? VIRTUAL LEARNING—Student Kristen Ozenna is one of Diomede’s 20 students continuing her education online while the school is closed.
Photo courtesy Frances Ozenna VIRTUAL LEARNING—Student Kristen Ozenna is one of Diomede’s 20 students continuing her education online while the school is closed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States