West Virginia Agency OKs Funds for School Building Projects

The West Virginia School Building Authority has voted to fund more than $72 million in facilities projects statewide.

Monday’s vote includes construction and renovation projects for public school systems in 19 counties.

Among the funding is $11 million for construction of a new prekindergarten through eighth-grade school in the Monroe County community of Peterstown. It includes an additional commitment of more than $10 million next year.

Fayette County will receive $6.6 million along with a commitment for similar funding next year to upgrade and renovate its school system.

Also included are more than $9 million each for improvements in Clay and Ohio counties.

West Virginia Agency OKs Funds for School Building Projects

The West Virginia School Building Authority has voted to fund $59.1 million in facilities projects statewide.

Monday’s vote includes construction and renovation projects for public school systems in 22 counties. The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports $49.2 million comes from this year’s “needs” grant funding cycle and $9.9 million is from next year’s cycle.

The board voted to spend $10.7 million for a new prekindergarten through second-grade school in Mercer County and $7.5 million for expansion of the Wood County Technical Center in Parkersburg.

Other projects include $7 million to fix heating and cooling issues and replace part of the roof of the Ben Franklin Career Center in Kanawha County, and $6.6 million toward a new Highlawn Elementary School in Huntington.

Twenty-seven counties had sought $89.8 million in funding.

Voters in West Virginia Reject $5.8 Million Bond for New School

A bond that would build a new school has been rejected for the second time this year by voters in West Virginia.

The Bluefield Daily Telegraph reports Monroe County voters rejected the $5.8 million bond with Saturday’s unofficial total of 1,223 to 877. The bond would’ve helped build a new school for Peterstown elementary and middle school students.

The county now loses $16 million from the state Building Authority that could’ve been used to fund most of the $24 million school.

School board member Andrew Evans says “residents were obviously in an anti-tax mood when they hit the polls,” as the County Commission established a $100 ambulance fee in August on every household before the referendum.

Voters rejected a $10 million bond in June that would’ve built the school and address other facility needs.

School Boards to Receive School Building Authority Grants

The board of West Virginia’s School Building Authority has voted to distribute about $6.7 million to 10 county public school systems that requested the “major improvement project” grant money.

  

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports the board gave final approval after discussion in voice votes on Monday with no “nays” heard for the funding in the selected counties: Fayette, Randolph, Webster, Pocahontas, Taylor, Lincoln, Pendleton, Mason, Mercer and Monongalia.

Kanawha, Cabell, Mingo and Tucker counties didn’t get any of the funding they had requested from the school building authority.

Counties requested a total of $9 million from the SBA in this year’s “major improvement project” grant cycle. The grants cannot exceed $1 million unlike the SBA’s larger “needs” grants.

The board distributes money to public schools for construction and renovation projects statewide.

Two Education-Related Bills Pass Out of the House

The House voted on two education-related bills Tuesday – one that would give The West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and Blind access to the School Building Authority and another aimed at giving higher education institutions more control of their own affairs.

House Bill 2123 – W.Va. Schools for the Deaf and Blind:

The West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and Blind, located in the Eastern Panhandle, have been around since 1870, starting out with just 30 students. Over the years, enrollment increased and the campus grew to 79 acres with sixteen major buildings.

The Schools for the Deaf and Blind have since fallen into disrepair, though. Administrators at the Schools say it would take roughly $1.5 million to take care of current construction and renovation needs. Unable to raise their own funds through bonds or levies to help pay for construction, repairs, or building upgrades like a county school system – the Schools sought help from lawmakers. Those efforts during the past few years, though, have been unsuccessful, but members in the House are trying once again to help the Schools find funding through House Bill 2123.

“We had this bill the last two years,” said Delegate Eric Nelson, R-Kanawha, House Finance Chair, “it passed out of this body unanimously. What this does is just allow the School and the Deaf and the Blind who reach out to needy children throughout this whole state to compete for some of the funds in the SBA, or the School Building Authority, that they issue annually to fund major improvements. I urge passage.”

The first year, the bill was vetoed by then-Governor Earl Ray Tomblin, and last year, it was held up in the Senate’s Finance committee. It passed out of the House unanimously on Tuesday.

Delegate Ruth Rowan, a Republican from Hampshire County, is the lead sponsor of the bill. She says the battle has been worth it –

“Because I know these children, and I know how much they need this, so they’re worth fighting for,” Rowan explained.

House Bill 2542 – Higher Education Flexibility:

House Bill 2542 was also taken up in the chamber. Its overall goal is to give West Virginia University, Marshall University, and the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine more flexibility in staffing and setting pay scales. Smaller universities and colleges in the state would have to notify the Higher Education Policy Commission of their intent to do the same.

The bill takes out the requirement that institutions have a recall list, essentially a list of laid off workers who, if their job would become available, would receive a call asking if they want their job back. The recall list becomes optional under the legislation.

Several Democrats argued the bill would open the door to age discrimination. House Education Chair Paul Espinosa countered that employees would still have the protection from the federal Civil Rights Act, Age in Discrimination in Employment Act, and Americans with Disabilities Act.

House Bill 2542 passed, 61-38, and moves across the rotunda to the Senate.

Justice Announces Education Appointments

Governor Jim Justice announced his choices Tuesday for open positions on the state’s Board of Education and School Building Authority. 

Miller Hall is a Beckley native who was a teacher and principal at Woodrow Wilson High School before working for the Raleigh County Department of Education, where he served as Assistant Superintendent of Support Services.

Barbara Whitecotton spent 18 years teaching in the classroom and 23 years in administration in Pendleton and Hardy counties, at one time serving as Hardy County’s superintendent.

Chuck Hatfield is also a retired educator. He spent 43 years working in the state’s public school system, serving as Putnam County’s superintendent until he retired in 2016.

Hall, Whitecotton and Hatfield will be sworn in at the state Board of Education’s February meeting.

Justice also named a new executive director of the West Virginia School Building Authority. Bucky Blackwell is a former member of the West Virginia House of Delegates and superintendent of Wyoming County Schools. 

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