
Posted: 11/27/2008 07:20:10 AM EST
Hamilton Avenue School students won't be allowed to move into their new building until April if the school's building committee can't secure the necessary approvals to make the facility safe for occupancy by the end of next week, the head of the school board said.
Otherwise, she said, the school board probably won't schedule a move until spring recess, so as not to interfere with students' preparation for the Connecticut Mastery Test, given two weeks after February break.
Hamilton Avenue students' scores plummeted on the 2008 CMT administered last spring, just weeks after mold problems prompted the school's administration to close their modular classrooms and disperse students elsewhere.
If students don't return to the renovated building until April 2009, the project will have stretched to four years from an initially projected time frame of 18 months.
The project, which began in April 2005, has been delayed one time after another, most recently when builders missed a deadline that would have allowed students to move in on the Aug. 27 start of the school year......
The building committee is scheduled to meet next Tuesday morning to assess what is causing the problems and decide whether crews can realistically address them by Dec. 5.
If so, the committee will turn over the renovated building to the Board of Education, allowing school officials to conduct environmental testing and school staff members to begin preparing their new classrooms.
Building committee member Sylvester Pecora said Wednesday that he was worried the issues that are plaguing the air-balancing system, once figured out, will prove too major to be resolved in a week.
If the project does not hit its Dec. 5 deadline, some parents say their children should be allowed to return to the renovated building as soon as it's ready for occupancy, and not wait until after CMTs are administered. ....
The Failed Hamilton School Committee Members Are:
But It Is Not Just Frank Mazza And His Band Od Idiots That Are To Blame For The Repeated Disasters And Cost Over Runs At The Failed Hamilton Avenue School Building Project.
Peter J. Crumbine (Selectman)
PTA
Alica Budkins
Architects
Roger L. Klein
Project Manager
Gerald J. Adam
gadam@pinnacleone.com
At best, this board of education was a sllep at the switch while two Greenwich Public Schools were closed and test scores rapidly droped.
But it was George Washington who declared the first official, national day of Thanksgiving in 1789, when he stated: "I do recommend and assign Thursday, the 26th day of November next, to be devoted by the people of these States to the service of that great and glorious Being who is the Beneficent Author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be ..."
It was Abraham Lincoln in 1863 who declared the last Thursday in November as a national day of Thanksgiving, and Franklin D. Roosevelt who changed it to the fourth Thursday in November.
It is fitting that this most uniquely American holiday is so closely tied to the nation's three unequivocally great presidents. This is a day that defines America, as each of those men did in his own way.
But though Lincoln was the most eloquent of our presidents, some of the most soaring oratory about this particular day came from Roosevelt. That should come as little surprise, however. FDR was a master of the language in his own right.
What he had to say about Thanksgiving is worth pondering, especially this year when so many of the great challenges we face mirror those of Roosevelt's time. He spoke to what is best about ..... BLAH ..... BLAH ...... BLAH ...... BLAH ...... BLAH ....... BLAH ....... BLAH .......
I should have mentioned that Harvest Time Church Is Having A Thanksgiving Dinner For Those Who Would Like To Spend Thanksgiving With Others. I Should Have Mentioned This Wonderful Community Event Earlier This Week.
Rell worried about jobless fund
HARTFORD - Gov. M. Jodi Rell warned Wednesday that if the state's rising unemployment rate increases much further, Connecticut might not have enough money to pay jobless benefits.
Some find dinner in the great outdoors
Not everyone gets their Thanksgiving turkey the same way in Connecticut. With a booming population of wildtur keys roaming the state, the Department of Environmental Protection said many people choose to hunt their own birds to prepare for the annual feast.
Expats make their own tradition
White rice with barberries. Gratin dauphinois. Cheesecake. Paella. While these foods don't have the Thanksgiving ring of turkey, stuffing or mashed potatoes, they'll be served on tables throughout Greenwich Thursday as the town's expatriate community embraces one of the year's most American holidays - and one of life's most universal messages.
Holiday season's first 10 cases presented
The cases: All families are feeling the effects of the current economic crunch. For those scraping to make ends meet before, conditions have only worsened.
New Witherell chef has trial by fire
Today's Thanksgiving feast will be the first meal that Nathaniel Witherell's new executive chef, Clinton Gee, will make for the nursing home's residents.
================================================================
Please send your comments to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

0 comments:
Post a Comment