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...preschool facilities, relocation, costs of temporary
and "swing space" construction, not to mention expenses
of SCC administration, project management and skyrocketing
materials prices, says Ponessa. Building costs now average
$200 per sq ft, and up.
Just finding a building site in
the densest state in America is hard enough. Add to that a
heavy dose of outmoded school buildings and polluted sites,
stir in a booming real estate market and you have a recipe
for a tough and expensive mission. Newark must acquire sites
for 50 of about 70 planned school projects, says the citys
facilities management plan. But SCC is leaving almost no tract
unturned, and is taking pains to make planned schools live
in harmony with municipal and business interests. In some
locations, SCC has been able to site schools with mixed-use
development, over-school air rights and public-private land
exchanges.
Many Abbott districts have embraced
schools as community anchors and lures for economic development.
The new $26-million West New York Middle School, located in
the heavily Hispanic town in teeming Hudson County across
from Manhattan, features 173,000 sq ft of well-lighted corridors,
11 science and technology labs and a 600-person auditorium
available to the community after school hours. Principal Anthony
Ferrainolo accepts kudos from visitors on the facility, just
opened in September, as he shows off all the amenities. "The
kids have respected what they now have," he says. "Now
they have a conducive place for educational development."
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| Reuse.
Defunct wire factory (above) is set to become a K-8 school,
but cost will be high. (Images courtesy of Clarke, Caton
Hintz) |
Trenton will adapt the now defunct
94,000-sq-ft Roebling factory, which once produced wire and
cable for the Brooklyn Bridge and other spans, for a K-8 school
at an estimated $60 million. Planners hope the facility will
boost existing ratables and future redevelopment of a site
termed "a shadowy abandoned eyesore" in New Jerseys
financially struggling capital city.
But others are fighting SCC or
are using school plans as political footballs. State education
rules often require new or renovated school buildings to be
larger in size than old facilities to meet current formulas
for appropriate education, officials say. "I dont
know any place where a site acquisition problem isnt
slowing things down or bringing them to a complete halt,"
says one industry source. Paul
A. Hamilton, director of SCCs
land acquisition division, says his agency and the state Dept.
of Environmental Pro-tection now have an agreement to expedite
review of old waste sites for new schools.
SCC also is vying with town officials
and outside developers who have other ideas for precious land.
"A district may pick out a site, but the mayor comes
along and wont give up a redevelopment site," says
one SCC consultant. The state is "dealing with the pace
of the private market and the redirection of growth to developed
areas," admits Hamilton. "Sometimes [property owners]
are cooperative and sometimes not. SCC doesnt get into
bidding wars by virtue of who we are, but in a rising market
time is working against us." While the agency can legally
condemn sites, it has done so in only about 15 to 20 cases,
officials say.
As the new school year proceeds,
schoolbuilders, district officials and legislators will be
taking a hard look at SCCs ongoing operations and future
funding sources. SCC sources say that the early push to move
projects out may now be resulting in more change orders and
extra cost. The Mechanical Contractors Association of New
Jersey has a pending lawsuit against SCC in state superior
court, charging that the agency is not enforcing anti-bid
shopping rules.
Spencer says SCCs change
order proess has been "streamlined" and that the
program is still "getting great competition." He
cites its small business enterprise rules which earmark 25%
of contracts to such firms. The program was made race neutral
last year after a court challenge. SCC also launched two initiatives
last year to provide small firms with help in securing working
capital, bonding and marketing assistance. "We are meeting
the goals," says Spencer.
Others say school district unhappiness
with "cookbook design" prompted some to push for
unique, but costlier, architecture and amenities. Two schools,
in Trenton and Perth Amboy, opted for design competitions
for new schools. In looking for new efficiencies, SCC will
likely be reassessing such designs. Some districts are unhappy
about the agencys push for "value engineering,"
says Ponessa. "They call it cheapening construction."
Now, as stories of SCCs potential
funding crunch make headlines across the state, Spencer has
a Nov. 22 date to brief state legislators and other officials
on the programs official status and financial needs.
At a school ribbon-cutting last month, McGreevey said the
state "will not be able to bear the entirety of the cost,"
adding that districts themselves may have to help out.
Ponessa praises SCCs schoolbuild-ing
progress to date but says the agency must open its books wider
if it hopes to make a case for more funding. Spencer claims
his costs are in line with other urban school districts and
plans "to do the benchmarking myself." But participants
are equally worried that the money woes will generate too
much debate and slow construction momentum. "There are
a lot of things were excited about," says Ponessa.
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