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		By Brenda Erdahl 
		
		May 6, 2008
 Nearly every seat in the Annandale Middle School choir room was occupied 
		Monday, April 28, the night the school board heard a recommendation from 
		the Facilities Task Force 
		to demolish the 1922 building at the middle school. An outpouring of 
		opinion pieces published in the Annandale Advocate, mostly objecting to 
		the idea of tearing down the historical building, brought attention to 
		what otherwise would have been an average monthly meeting for board 
		members. To conserve time, the board allowed only two visitors to speak, 
		Laura Hood Beckman and Jill Bishop, organizers of a movement to keep the 
		'22 building a viable part of the Annandale School District. Others were 
		invited to express their opinions at a special meeting at 7 p.m. 
		Thursday, May 15, to discuss the 
		task force recommendations in greater detail, including the fate 
		of the 1922 building. Recommendations On April 28, Bishop and Beckman 
		said their piece briefly before members of the 
		task force unveiled their recommendations for facility 
		improvements to all three school buildings, plus the community education 
		center. "There have been numerous letters in the Advocate, also a front 
		page feature article, hundreds of people have signed petitions. There 
		have been meetings and emails and phone calls and posters," Bishop told 
		the board. "It all boils down to the same thing: Many people want you to 
		choose to reconsider that one part of the 
		task force plan that leads to the demolition of the 1922 
		building." Task force 
		members, a range of volunteers from the community including parents, 
		teachers, business owners and school board members, cited two main 
		reasons for their recommendation to phase out the 1922 building. No. 1, 
		the site is severely landlocked and can't be expanded. While there is no 
		need for expansion now since enrollment has been on the decline, 
		task force member Angie Manuel said that could change in the 
		future. The group also had some concerns that the state would create a 
		new standard that would require more room, or the need for outdoor space 
		would increase. "The building should be considered a part of our 
		facility past and present, but not 
		its long term future," the 
		task force team wrote in 
		its report. "In doing this, the school district should not invest 
		significant funds into a major remodeling of the current middle school 
		building. Such an investment would commit the school district to this 
		site for decades to come." The second reason is that it would cost 
		taxpayers $1.2 to $2 million more to renovate the old building than it 
		would to tear it down. If the district continued to use it as a school, 
		the building would need new windows, tuck pointing, a new roof, a new 
		heating and cooling and air exchange system, an elevator and a lift into 
		the lower gym. If it were renovated, the 
		task force would also recommend putting a commons area and 
		cafeteria in the old building, Supt. Steve Niklaus said. The final 
		recommendation was to demolish the building or offer it to individuals 
		or groups in the community for non-school public or private use. If 
		voters approve a bond issue, the money the district would have used to 
		tear down the old school - $100,000 to $150,000 - would be given to a 
		community group to fix up the old school as it sees fit. The 
		task force's recommendation to phase out the 1922 building would 
		require moving the fifth grade to Bendix Elementary School where 
		additions would be built to house them, members said. The 
		task force's job 
		wasn't just to study the middle school. The members also identified and 
		prioritized needs at the elementary school, the high school, the 
		community education center and the district's outdoor recreational and 
		athletic facilities. In total, they identified more than $25 million 
		dollars in facility needs they hope to go to the taxpayers for in the 
		next year or two. "We were real sensitive to the tax burden," Manuel 
		said. "We feel this plan is for a reasonable amount." Even if a bond 
		issue were passed, people living within the Annandale School District 
		would still pay the second- or third-lowest amount in school taxes in 
		Wright County, she said. In determining the recommendations, the 
		task force held nine meetings between October and March during 
		which they toured each of the buildings, studied enrollment trends, sent 
		out surveys to families in the district, heard from engineers and talked 
		with teachers and administrators who work in the buildings. From there 
		they made recommendations for each of the buildings. A priority is the 
		state of the roofs on all three schools. The roofs of all three 
		buildings are almost 20 years old and need to be replaced, the 
		task force said in its 
		report. That includes the entire roof at Bendix and the high school and 
		portions of the middle school including the roofs on the 1954, 1961 and 
		1991 additions at a cost of around $2,854,000. At Bendix, 
		task force members recommend a new bus parking lot separate from 
		vehicle parking plus pedestrian walking areas to address what many feel 
		is a dangerous environment for picking up and dropping off children. A 
		big concern at Bendix is the lack of walls and doors, which have been 
		cited as a problem almost since the building was built 38 years ago. In 
		a survey, one parent admitted he or she was considering taking their 
		pre-school-aged child to a different district when the time comes 
		because of the school's design. "My thoughts on the pod system at Bendix 
		is that it may work, but I feel that it may not be a very good setting 
		to learn in," the parent wrote. "I would be willing to vote yes to a 
		referendum to help out." The 
		task force's proposal is to remodel the building to provide those 
		things, as well as build additions to house the fifth-grade and 
		preschool programs now at the community education center. The 
		task force also recommends new gyms, locker rooms, a food service 
		and cafeteria area, an adequate media center and a secured entry and 
		administrative space. The group also recommends replacing the Bendix 
		boiler with a high efficiency system. The mechanical systems at AMS also 
		need reworking, they said. That should include replacing the boilers at 
		the middle school with a similar standard steam boiler, replacing all 
		steam traps, replacing the 1954 air handling units and reconditioning 
		others as needed. The mechanical improvements in both buildings would 
		cost around $2.5 million. The middle school also needs new windows in 
		the 1954 and 1961 additions and improvements to security at the school 
		entrance. Security would be upgraded by moving the middle school 
		administrative offices next to the front entry where the district office 
		is now located. The task force 
		talked about moving the district offices to the community ed center 
		building. Finally, the committee recommended the district join with the 
		city of Annandale in constructing new ball fields on the sewage pond 
		site that will be abandoned in the near future. That project should 
		include baseball, softball, tennis and multi-purpose fields for soccer, 
		football and lacrosse at a cost of around $5 million. According to 
		Niklaus, now is the time to approach voters for money for major 
		improvements to the schools because in 2009 the mortgage on the high 
		school will be paid off.
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