patching...
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

Verona Schools Generate Long List of Needed Improvements

The Verona School District has listed a number of buildings and ground repairs but are still searching for a way to pay for them all.

 

The Verona School District has made extensive improvements to its facilities and grounds, but there is still much work to be done and little money with which to do it.

During the Tuesday, Nov. 27 meeting, Verona Director of Facilities Paul McDevitt provided an update for the Verona Board of Education on the status of buildings and grounds, including previous improvements and a laundry list of what still needs to be done.

McDevitt, Superintendent Steven Forte and members of the board of education have been working closely together to establish a list of priorities for a five-year plan.

“Priorities are established based on the criteria of health and safety for our building occupants and to provide a school environment which supports student achievement,” said McDevitt.

The top five priorities are heat and controls, doors and security, Lower Field Turf, sidewalks and blacktop while other priorities are improvements to masonry, fire alarms, ceilings and lightings along with many others, according to McDevitt.

The district has been looking to replace controls and hot water pumps since 1992 but the equipment still has not been replaced. High school boilers are 30 years old, 10 years past their prime, said McDevitt. Irregular heating also causes distractions and discomfort in classrooms, he added.

Exterior doors are an eyesore, safety concern and desperately need to be replaced, the board said.

The board has allocated $2.5 million for heating upgrades and $350,000 for door replacement.

The board is also setting aside between $1.7 million and $4 million for the football field, which has been sprouting sinkholes in recent months. According to Board President John Quattrocchi, half of the field was filled in around 1970 and may contain concrete slabs and rebar.

“The current facilities budget does not allow us to address these needs,” said McDevitt. “The township may be able to assume the costs of certain projects that can be defined as providing a 'community benefit,' but this will not solve the fiscal shortfall.”

The total budget for facilities is $2.5 million, with $350,000 going to the operating budget. More than $150,000 goes to recurring costs, which only leaves about $200,000 for repairs and improvements.

“This is not a sufficient budget for maintaining the district,” said McDevitt. “We have implemented new practices and improved and refined old ones to yield a more efficient and productive department, but our needs well exceed our budget.”

“We need to develop a plan to fund these needed projects and improvements,” he said.

Estimated costs in order of priority are as follows: 

Heat/Controls $2.5 million
Doors/Security $350,000
Lower Field Turf $1.7-$4 million
Sidewalks $100,000
Blacktop $450,000
Entry/Mason/Bricks $300,000
Fire Alarm/FNB-Forrest $100,000
Classroom ceilings/lighting $175,000
Tech/Backup generator $450,000
Kitchen Upgrades $125,000
Addition VHS Band $400,000
VHS/Brookdale bleachers $100,000

The Buildings and Grounds presentation can be viewed in its entirety in the photo section of this article.

Related Topics: Verona School district and buildings and grounds

Salvatore Ferruggia

11:05 am on Thursday, November 29, 2012

Dear Mayor, Councilmen and Town Manager and Board of Education Members,

It is extremely upsetting for citizens, especially Seniors who DO NOT get any “raise/COLA” increases” to accept that the “freeze” is only for those that need it most. Perhaps all of Verona’s “work force” should not be given the increases of 3 and 3.5 % raises so our property taxes are not driven to the moon. The same goes for the Board of Education. We live in Verona, New Jersey, not Beverly Hills. Soon many Seniors will have no choice but to sell their homes that they’ve lived in for years and years. Maybe you can lead the “wake-up” call to everyone responsible for money management in our town. If Seniors have a freeze in their social security benefits and/or pension benefits, than ALL should accept a freeze in their salaries.
Sincerely,
Salvatore Ferruggia
39 Valhalla Way

Reply

Salvatore Ferruggia

2:24 pm on Thursday, November 29, 2012

Certainly hope that my comment is taken with complete and sincere intelligence.
Sal Ferruggia

Reply

Leave a comment