Wednesday, February 04, 2015

GEHR School District Seeks Approval for $52.2 Million In Referendums



Posted: Tuesday, February 3, 2015 6:17 pm
The Greater Egg Harbor Regional School Board will try once again to get voter approval for repairs, renovations and additions at the three high schools.
Unlike last year, when a proposal failed, this time district officials have broken the work into three separate bonds. But the first bond for health and safety issues must pass for the other two to pass.
“We are giving voters a choice,” superintendent John Keenan said Tuesday. “We are conscious of the economic times, but the need is there, and the state aid is there.”
The total for all three bonds is $52.2 million with the state paying $19.4 million of that total. Keenan said he understands the challenge of convincing voters to approve three bonds, but said they have planned several public meets at all three schools and posted the information on the district website to give residents as much information as possible.

Last March, voters in three of the four towns that make up the regional district rejected a $37 million bond proposal. Only Hamilton Township votes supported the plan, which included extensive heating, ventilating, and air conditioning work at the 55-year old Oakcrest High School in Mays Landing. This plan includes that work again.
The new bond referendum was approved by the school board at its meeting Monday night. Voting will be held from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. March 10 at polling sites in all four affected municipalities — Hamilton Township, Galloway Township, Egg Harbor City and Mullica Township.

The first bond is the most crucial and includes health and safety work at all three schools. That segment would cost $20.3 million with the state providing $11 million.
The 55-year old Oakcrest High School would get an entirely new HVAC system which would allow the school to add air conditioning. Keenan said he believes last year voters got stuck on the air conditioning issue when it really that is just part of the overall replacement of the entire system. The current HVAC ventilators are 20 years past their useful life and fail regularly. Bathrooms, the lobby, security, classroom lighting,and locker rooms would also be upgraded.
Work at Absegami, which is 32 years old, would include technology upgrades, enhanced security, HVAC rooftop unit replacement, and locker room renovations.

Cedar Creek would get enhanced security and additional servers and software updates to meet increased demand.

The second bond includes renovations and some additions for program expansion. It would cost $26 million, with $8 million coming from the state.

At Oakcrest, that proposal would include replacing the track, additions to the library and cafeteria, a new television studio and equipment, two new instructional kitchens, a band room expansion, and a robotics lab.
At Absegami, the second bond would include a band room addition, science room renovations, a new auxiliary gym, replacement of the track, cafeteria expansion, a new robotics lab, and some roof replacement.
There is no work at Cedar Creek in question two.

The third question would install new artificial turf athletic fields with natural fill at all three high schools. Cedar Creek would get lights and a refreshment stand. Each field would be lined for soccer, lacrosse, field hockey and football. The cost would be $5.8 million, with $229,166 paid by the state.
The tax impact would vary by town, and the district’s prepared information includes a breakdown of the tax impact in each municipality for each of the three questions, based on a 20-year bond at an estimated interest rate of 3.75 percent.

If all three proposals pass, annual property taxes per $100,000 of assessed value would increase $39.70 in Egg Harbor City, $44 in Galloway Township, $38.60 in Hamilton Township and $59.90 in Mullica Township.

If just the first question passes, annual taxes per $100,000 of assessed value would increase $11.30 in Egg Harbor City, $12.60 in Galloway Township, $11 in Hamilton Township and $17.10 in Mullica Township.

If approved, work would start this summer and some work could be finished by September of 2016.
Public meetings on the proposals will be held at 6:30 p.m. at Oakcrest on Feb. 12 and 24, Absegami on Feb. 11 and 25, and Cedar Creek on Feb. 10 and 26. Information is also posted on all three high school and the district websites. A brochure will be mailed to every resident in the affected towns.
Architect renderings and plans were on display at Absegami Tuesday and generated a good amount of interest by students. Expanded cafeterias were popular since the current four lunch periods mean some students each lunch as early as 10 a.m. The new athletic fields also got some attention, and students also appreciated the academic proposals.
“This isn’t just sprinkles on a cupcake,” said Absegami junior Betty Mulugeta. “These are things we need. We might not get to use them all by graduation, but I want future generations to appreciate this school. I want it to be better for everyone.”


GREATER EGG HARBOR REGIONAL BOND PROPOSALS
The bond vote will be held from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. March 10 at sites in all four municipalities.
Question 1 must pass for the other two to pass.
QUESTION 1: Health and safety issues
Total cost: $20,300,590
State aid: $11,060,878
Taxpayer share: $9,239,712
QUESTION 2: Renovations, additions
Total cost: $26,038,555
State aid: $8,089,986
Taxpayer share: $17,948,569
QUESTION 3: Athletic fields
Total cost: $5,818,800
State aid: $229,166
Taxpayer share: $5,589,634
Public meetings on the proposals will be held at 6:30 p.m. at Oakcrest on Feb. 12 and 24, Absegami on Feb. 11 and 25, and Cedar Creek on Feb. 10 and 26.
Detailed information is online at www.absegami.net, www.oakcrest.net, www.cedarcreekhs.net, and www. gehrhsd.net.
  
Contact Diane D'Amico:
609-272-7241
@ACPressDamico on Twitter

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Almost all of the money would be spent at Oakcrest and Absegami.

Anonymous said...

This is the only portion of our property taxes that we have any control over by vote.

Anonymous said...

So let me get this straight. The new Super of GERSD has decide to eliminate an entire track of classes for our schoolchildren. Previously, there were tracks that included College Prep, Accelerated, and Honors classes. Now, that middle track has been eliminated, leaving just College Prep and Honors classes. So the new Super is asking us to pay more property taxes for less educational opportunities?

Also, CC is such a new school that it is tough for me to believe that it already needs upgrades for safety and health reasons.

More money for turf and lights for football? How about more money for educational opportunities for our children?

My vote is a "NO"!

Anonymous said...

We are at the breaking point with taxes and they are still on the increase . Folks have cut back and are doing make do with less. Now the schools have to do the same as every resident has to. In times of prosperity just about everyone supports the schools and their budgets but not now. Sure we all would like to have a lot of stuff and some we consider necessities but we just can't afford it for ourselves let alone for others.Some will claim it'll hurt the kids but having folks lose homes hurts them much more.

Anonymous said...

It seems that Mullica would have the largest tax increase and get the least benefit.