HEADLINE:
The options presented by the Greenwich Board Of Education caused negative feedback to come from the audience of parents and community members
QUOTES:
“This has all the key ingredients of discrimination,” said Hamilton Avenue parent Gina DeMartis who wants to know how the board could consider a building unacceptable for the Glenville students, but OK for her children.
“This is not a plan,” Glenville parent Deb Klein said. “This is an outrage and an insult to the Glenville community, and we will not stand for it.”
“Offensive,”says Glenville parent Celia Fernandez
STORY:
Backup plans for construction get F’s from parents
BREAKING NEWS Posted 11:06 a.m., July 23, 2008
Emergency backup plans in case the new Hamilton Avenue School isn’t finished in time are proceeding, despite strong parent opposition to what’s on the table.
District staff told the Board of Education at a special meeting Tuesday they would not be recommending any dispersion of students. Hamilton Avenue students were sent to other schools this March in response to mold at the modular classrooms. That move has triggered an investigation by the federal Office of Civil Rights as to whether Hamilton Avenue students have been treated fairly.
Without dispersion on the table, it leaves two options: send Hamilton Avenue students to the cleaned modulars until the school is done or send Hamilton Avenue students to Glenville School and put the Glenville students in the modulars. Both solutions require the delay of the planned demolition for Glenville.
There is still a possibility of Hamilton Avenue School not being finished in time for the beginning of school on Aug. 27. Board Chairwoman Nancy Weissler said the idea of not having the school complete is “heartbreaking for all of us.” Frank Mazza, the project’s building committee chairman, expressed optimism that the project will be done on time, but said it depends on whether the contractor, Worth Construction, does its job.
Mr. Mazza told the board there are minor problems that need to be resolved so the building can get its critical temporary certificate of occupancy. He said he believes it can be accomplished by the first week of August.
However, the project remains on a tight timetable with the start of school just weeks away. The district estimates that it needs 31 days to get Glenville School back in shape for student use.
District staff told the Board of Education at a special meeting Tuesday they would not be recommending any dispersion of students. Hamilton Avenue students were sent to other schools this March in response to mold at the modular classrooms. That move has triggered an investigation by the federal Office of Civil Rights as to whether Hamilton Avenue students have been treated fairly.
Without dispersion on the table, it leaves two options: send Hamilton Avenue students to the cleaned modulars until the school is done or send Hamilton Avenue students to Glenville School and put the Glenville students in the modulars. Both solutions require the delay of the planned demolition for Glenville.
There is still a possibility of Hamilton Avenue School not being finished in time for the beginning of school on Aug. 27. Board Chairwoman Nancy Weissler said the idea of not having the school complete is “heartbreaking for all of us.” Frank Mazza, the project’s building committee chairman, expressed optimism that the project will be done on time, but said it depends on whether the contractor, Worth Construction, does its job.
Mr. Mazza told the board there are minor problems that need to be resolved so the building can get its critical temporary certificate of occupancy. He said he believes it can be accomplished by the first week of August.
However, the project remains on a tight timetable with the start of school just weeks away. The district estimates that it needs 31 days to get Glenville School back in shape for student use.
More Greenwich Post News Links:-
Housing report is online
Earlier this month the United Way of Greenwich Community Planning Council released the agency’s just completed Workforce Housing Study. The report is now available online.
It presents the findings gathered by the United Way’s 12-member Workforce Housing Task Force, chaired by Judy Holden and Karen Royce, and consultants Dr. Kurt Schlichting and Dr. Edward Deak of Fairfield University....
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At Home makes move
At Home in Greenwich, a nonprofit membership organization created to enable senior Greenwich residents to remain in their own homes as they grow older, has moved to larger quarters to accommodate its expanding membership. The new address, 139 East Putnam Ave., is on the campus of the Second Congregational Church, and is located on the second floor of the educational building....
...One phone call to its executive director, Lise Jameson, gives members access to home health care, household and grounds maintenance services, transportation, as well as social and cultural activities...
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Former pastor returns to church n celebration of Diamond Hill United Methodist Church’s 140th anniversary, the Rev. Terry Pfeiffer, who served Diamond Hill from 1969 to 1976, and his wife, Margey, will be returning to preach.
....Mr. Pfeiffer started his full-time ministry at Diamond Hill after graduating from Yale Divinity School. While at the church, his son, Douglas, was born in 1972, and was the first child to be born in that parsonage in more than 100 years....
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