SCOTIA & GLENVILLE
Taxpayers critical of $26.76M schools project
BY MICHAEL GOOT Gazette Reporter
About 10 people showed up Monday night to criticize the school district’s
proposed $26.76 million building proposal, saying it will contribute to
higher taxes and calling a proposed artificial turf field an extravagance.
Residents will vote on the proposition on Dec. 16. Polling hours are from
6 a.m. to 9 p.m. at Scotia-Glenville High School on Sacandaga Road.
Much of the discussion centered on part of the proposal to replace the
current football field with artificial turf, install 500-seat bleachers
and fix the running track at a cost of $4.5 million. School officials
have said installing artificial turf would allow the district to schedule
more practices and games on the field and reduce wear and tear on the
other grass fields.
Glenville resident Roz Streeter said she did not need synthetic turf when
she was younger.
“We used the town field. Nobody got injured; nobody wound up in
the hospital. Nowadays, we have to have state-of-the-art everything at
the cost of the taxpayer.”
She added that taxpayers cannot continue to put up with rising taxes,
which she said have doubled since she moved back to the district 10 years
ago. “Something has got to give because the taxpayers can’t
keep giving. I’m tapped out.”
District officials said that the 1.9 percent that the project would add
to the tax rate starting in 2010 equates to about $59 for a home with
an assessment of $160,000, before any STAR tax reductions. The total cost
of the project is $37.6 million when the interest on the debt payments
is included.
Ed Capovani of Scotia also took issue with the proposed turf field and
disputed district figures that it would cost $500,000 to install in a
new grass field.
“There’s no money around. You want to saddle the rest of New
York state to pay for this frivolous field,” he said.
John Jojo of Mosaic Architects said that state mandates requiring the
district to bid out multiple contracts and comply with prevailing wage
rates drive up the cost. He said the difficult economy could hold down
prices because competition will be keen among contractors submitting bids.
“If we did this project five years ago, the prices would be substantially
higher than they would be today,” he said.
Marilyn DuBois of Glenville was concerned about the safety of the synthetic
field and the material used to fill them and whether it can cause illness.
Board member John Yagielski said the artificial turf field would be able
to hold 440 events per year. The district would need to add six more fields
and an irrigation system at a total cost of $4.5 million to meet the same
level of use.
“We’re currently operating far more events than our grass
fi elds can support,” he said.
Another issue was the timing of the vote. Armand Canestraro of Glenville
said some residents are not here.
“There’s a large aged community that has already started to
commute south,” he said.
Board President Margaret Smith said it took the board this long to put
all the pieces together for this project. She had wished they had been
able to get it done this past spring, before all the bad economic news.
Absentee ballot applications are available in the district business office
and by calling 382-1222. They must be returned by 5 p.m. on Dec. 16.
There was little discussion on other components of the project, including
installing solar panels to the Sacandaga Elementary School roof, renovating
the middle school science laboratories and enclosing the middle school
library, expanding the high school library and replacing 10-year-old network
servers.
Smith added that if the proposition were to fail, then the board would
focus on using its $935,000 in EXCEL aid to address critical maintenance
issues like roof replacements at three elementary schools.
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