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Questions have come up from
the public hearing and other sources regarding the building renovation
proejct. We have tried to clarify some of those below:
•
The state is discussing reductions or freezing state operational
or "foundation" aid for 2009-10.
Building aid, which this proposal
is relying upon, has long been a social contract between the state and
schools as a way to keep schools safe and in good shape.
If the unprecedented
were to occur, and building aid were eliminated or drastically reduced,
that would cause a delay or reduction of the project. Local taxpayers
would not be called upon to make up the difference.
• The Sacandaga
Elementary School playground may - or may not - be moved because of the
project. However, Athletic Director John Geniti prefers to leave
the playground where it is now located and shift the bleachers or fields
toward the tennis courts. Here
is a flyer about the options involving the playground.
•
The school district will seek grant funding and other non-tax
ways to pay for the artificial turf, solar energy panels and
other aspects of the project.
•
Construction would not begin until at least the summer of 2010,
when the economy will likely be more stable than today. It will take that
long for the school district to design the project and receive state education
department approval.
•
In these difficult times, the school district understands that
building aid and local tax dollars all come from the same people.
This package makes use of several sources of funding to bring the tax
impact down to a maximum of 1.9 percent.
If Scotia-Glenville
does not take advantage of the available state funding, other school districts
are in line to use it. It’s time that Scotia-Glenville taxpayers
got their fair share from the state.
•The
project has been in the works at least since 2005 and, by and
large, completes work that was needed at the middle school and high school
but was cut from the 1999 building project. The timing with the vote is
difficult with the state of the ecomony; however, the project would not
begin for two years - it takes that long to finalize designs and receive
state Education Department approval.
•
Regarding the artificial turf proposal, the 530 secondary athletes, as
well as thousands of physical education students at the high school, middle
school and Sacandga School, would use the field. The field is
equivalent to replacing six grass fields and would save on annual maintenance
costs. Boys and girls; soccer, field hockey, lacrosse, football
and potential other sports would use the field.
•
A field, bleachers and lights are not a “stadium.” Use of
that word conjures up multi-million dollar complexes for the New York
Yankees.
•
The project would save on operating costs – the
solar energy panels at Sacandaga Elementary are projected to save $10,000
to $12,000 per year and the artificial turf, because it would not require
watering and striping, would save about $10,000 per year.
•
The projected tax increase is 1.9 percent – spread
over three years beginning in 2010. That works out to less than $60 per
year and $5 per month for the typical homeowner with a $160,000 assessment.
Fiscal Advisors from Syracuse built the financing package for the project.
The Board of Education, trying to keep the local taxpayer costs down,
used all resources available to present a responsible proposal.
The school district hopes that all Scotia-Glenville community
members will vote, 6 a.m. to 9 p.m., on Tuesday, Dec. 16 at the high school
gymnasium.
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