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School board picks Scarboro Park for new preschool

Posted at 10:27 pm February 27, 2017
By John Huotari 4 Comments

The new preschool could be located at Elm Grove Park in east Oak Ridge or Scarboro Park in central Oak Ridge, pictured above on Saturday, Feb. 25, 2017, and the city's school board expects to recommend one of the two sites on Monday, Feb. 27, a school official said Friday. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

The new preschool should be built at Scarboro Park, the Oak Ridge Board of Education said in a unanimous vote on Monday, Feb. 27, 2017. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

The new preschool should be built at Scarboro Park, the Oak Ridge Board of Education said in a unanimous vote on Monday.

The site selection in a 5-0 voice vote came after about 15 minutes of discussion during a school board meeting on Monday.

The other option was Elm Grove Park. That park on East Tennessee Avenue in east Oak Ridge had been identified as the preferred site after a preschool report was published in October 2015.

With one exception, school board members said the two sites are relatively equal as measured by a number of factors outlined by BOE Vice Chair Bob Eby, including learning environment, building and transportation costs, safety and security, expandability and impact on parks, and community and City Council support. The one significant difference: There has been opposition to building the new preschool at Elm Grove Park, while the Scarboro community has welcomed the idea of building the new preschool at Scarboro Park.

“The difference is very stark,” Oak Ridge Board of Education member Angi Agle said. “The community support from Scarboro does make a huge difference.”

“It becomes a very simple choice,” said school board member Paige Marshall. “Members of the Scarboro community, hands down, want the preschool there.”

The Oak Ridge City Council will also consider the site selection during a March 13 meeting, although officials aren’t expecting City Council members to oppose the school board’s site selection.

Scarboro Park is across Carver Avenue from the Scarboro Community Center. The city-owned Community Center had also been briefly considered after a day care center closed there last fall.

But Oak Ridge Board of Education Chair Keys Fillauer said expanding the Scarboro Community Center would require “stair stepping and filling,” essentially work to move dirt and level the site. That’s not cost-effective and not great for the preschool, Fillauer said. Also, the administrative area and gymnasium at Scarboro Community Center would still be used during the day, and the preschool couldn’t be attached to those areas, Fillauer said.

Officials have received a preliminary cost estimate of about $9.1 million for the preschool, with the costs about the same for either park.

Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson has said the city could have a budget placeholder of about $10 million for the new preschool in the next budget to be considered by City Council. The final amount could vary, he said. The city doesn’t have the cash on hand and will need a financial plan. With the help of bond adviser Cumberland Securities, financing information could be included in the municipal budget that goes into effect July 1, Watson said.

Elm Grove Park and Scarboro Community Center were both discussed at a joint work session between the Oak Ridge Board of Education and Oak Ridge City Council on Thursday, January 26. Conceptual site plans and public safety statistics were presented to the two boards.

The conceptual site plans were done by Studio Four Design.

Plans call for the new preschool to have 20 rooms, and possibly allow for expansion. A new preschool has been on the city’s wish list for many years.

On Monday, Fillauer said a joint city-schools committee that was formed about two years ago, before the report was issued in October 2015, had looked at about 20 sites, some owned by the city and some privately owned, with some of them vacant properties and some already occupied by buildings.

But there are regulations that govern what has to be in a preschool building as well as the building itself, Fillauer said.

“That eliminates some potential buildings that are already standing that may not currently be (in use),” he said.

Officials have learned more about the sites, including through drilling and engineering; working with Studio Four Design; and by discussing public safety with Oak Ridge Fire Chief Darryl Kerley and Police Chief Jim Akagi.

“We have done a very thorough and exhaustive, I feel, review and study since this started almost two years ago,” Fillauer said.

Efforts to build a new preschool date back even further, to the mid-1980s. Officials have said the current preschool on New York Avenue is in a building constructed about 70 years ago in what was supposed to be a temporary structure.

The current building can no longer house the preschool and meet codes that are in place for preschools, Fillauer said.

One thing has been consistent among those who have contacted school board members, whether they prefer Elm Grove Park or Scarboro Park: “The support for the preschool has been unwavering,” Fillauer said.

More information will be added as it becomes available.


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Copyright 2016 Oak Ridge Today. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Filed Under: Education, Education, Front Page News, Government, K-12, Oak Ridge, Slider Tagged With: Angi Agle, Bob Eby, Darryl Kerley, Elm Grove Park, Jim Akagi, Keys Fillauer, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Paige Marshall, preschool, Scarboro Community Center, Scarboro Park, Studio Four Design

Comments

  1. Philip W Nipper says

    February 28, 2017 at 3:21 pm

    Glad a decision has been made and a good site picked (selected sounds better). Now council needs to act and we need to get the ball rolling on the project PDQ. Thanks for a job well done BOE!

    Reply
    • johnhuotari says

      March 1, 2017 at 1:01 am

      This is one of those stories I’ve covered occasionally or regularly since I started reporting here in 2004, along with the mall, the eighth lane, Applewood Apartments, and Alexander Inn. There has been some progress or changes or significant progress on all those other stories, so I guess it’s time for the preschool too.

      I was initially going to use “selects” in the headline, but went with “picks” because it’s shorter for headline writing.

      I guess one question to watch as this goes through Council is the question of funding. But I have the sense from the Council work sessions that Council members, like BOE members, are ready to take action.

      Reply
      • Sam Hopwood says

        March 1, 2017 at 10:36 am

        I hope there will be a security fence around the new preschool as there is around the apartments that are in close proximity. It will certainly be needed.
        As far as funding, a property tax increase may be needed and I am supportive of that. A city property tax increase has been needed for some time.

        Thanks John, for the fine job you do reporting these events!

        Reply
        • johnhuotari says

          March 1, 2017 at 2:13 pm

          Thank you, Sam. I try to do the best I can on reporting on many different stories in the area.

          I believe I recall correctly from the Elm Grove Park discussion that there would have to be some way to ensure that people using the park would be separate from children at the preschool. I don’t know exactly what that means (a fence?), but I assume it would apply to other locations as well.

          Reply

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