The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Sunday, September 3, 1995              TAG: 9509010176
SECTION: CHESAPEAKE CLIPPER       PAGE: 18   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY ELIZABETH THIEL, STAFF WRITER 
                                             LENGTH: Long  :  181 lines

CITY MAKES PLANS TO MEET GROWING NEED FOR SCHOOLS

When schoolhouse doors open Tuesday, there will be 900 more students needing desks, lockers and class assignments than there were last year.

In the state's fastest-growing city, that's not unusual. The school system is expanding at an astounding rate. Over the past five years, enrollment in Chesapeake public schools has increased by 5,800 to its present level of about 35,000 students. And the kids are expected to keep on coming.

The School Board's continuing challenge is to find space for all of them.

Monday, school officials proposed to the board a five-year, $172.9 million plan to buy land, build new schools and renovate or expand old ones.

The board must now consider the annual Capital Improvement Plan, approve it or a variation of it and pass it along to City Council for consideration. The board is scheduled to take action Sept. 25, and it will hold public hearings in the meantime.

The proposed plan includes money for seven new schools, a new building to replace an existing school, eight school additions with simultaneous renovations to seven of them and new roofs for four schools.

The plan proposes to spend $6.7 million more this school year than anticipated when council approved it last year - $16.9 million instead of $10.2 million. In 1997-98, there would be $21.7 million more spent, and in 1998-99 the total would be $5.7 million more than previously budgeted.

The only year in which the budget would decrease would be 1996-97, when spending for capital improvements would be $19.4 million instead of the $25.3 million previously approved by council, a difference of $5.9 million.

The increases, said Steven M. Gilbert, the school system's administrative director for operations, are in part attributable to a significant boost in construction costs.

This year, the state's average cost for constructing schools is $90 per square foot; in 1993-94, the cost was only $73 per square foot, Gilbert said. By the time some projects in the plan are ready for construction, the cost could rise to $97 per square foot, he said.

Technology demands also are rising, he said, which adds to a new school's price tag.

To offset construction expenses, school officials also are proposing some attendance zone shifts and grade reconfigurations. They hope that would spread students more evenly between crowded and undercapacity schools, reducing the need to build new classrooms.

The goal of the school system's building plan is to keep pace with enrollment and significantly reduce the city's fleet of portable classrooms, which now tops 330.

But even the best of plans will have to be monitored and modified over the next few years to keep pace with increasing enrollment, said Superintendent W. Randolph Nichols.

``Our city is continually growing,'' he said. ``And even if you approve the plan the way it is, and the city funds it, that's not the end of it.'' MEMO: The School Board will hold work sessions on the Capital Improvement Plan

Sept. 11, 18 and 25. Public hearings will be held Sept. 11 and 25 at 7

p.m. in the school administration building at the city's municipal

complex on Cedar Road.

ILLUSTRATION: CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS

Here's what school officials have proposed to handle growth over

the next five years. For ease of planning, officials divide the city

into seven areas based on the schools there:

Western Branch

An addition and renovation to Western Branch High School, which

gets under way this year, is scheduled to be completed in January

1997. The money for the project already has been allocated.

A new middle school would be constructed in 1997-98 to relieve

crowded Western Branch Middle School. Council last year approved

$24.5 million for the project. Design and construction costs now are

estimated at $29 million, an increase of $4.5 million. The land

would be free, given to the city by developers.

A new elementary school in the Chittum area would be postponed

from 1997-98 to just after the turn of the century, but the cost

would likely go up from the $10.8 million already budgeted. The land

would be free, given to the city by developers. In the meantime,

attendance zones between Chittum Elementary and Western Branch

Primary and Intermediate schools would be shifted to relieve

Chittum.

Oscar F. Smith

Oscar Smith High School would get a $5.8 million addition in

1998-99, two years sooner than planned.

The new Thurgood Marshall Elementary, scheduled to be completed

within the next couple of weeks to serve kindergarten through third

grades, would be refocused to house students through the fifth

grade. That would provide relief to crowded G.W. Carver

Intermediate.

Indian River

The second phase of an addition and renovation project at Indian

River High gets underway this year, and it is scheduled for

completion in the fall of 1996. That project already has been

funded.

Norfolk Highlands Primary this year would get a $5.7 million

renovation and addition, to be completed in 1997-98. Council must

approve the expense, which was not budgeted in last year's plan

because the school system was conducting a study to see whether the

project was feasible.

Sparrow Road Intermediate and Georgetown Primary would get

additions and renovations in 1997-98, to be completed in 1999-2000.

Council last year approved $7.8 million for those projects, but the

cost would go up to $13 million.

Land for a new high school would be purchased in 1996-97. City

Council last year approved $1.5 million, but the cost is projected

to go down to $1.2 million. The school would be built after the turn

of the century.

Crestwood

A new middle school would be constructed in 1997-98, to be open

just after the turn of the century. City Council last year approved

$24.8 million for the project, but the cost now is projected to

reach $30 million.

A new elementary school would be constructed in 1997-98, to open

in 1999-2000. City Council last year approved $11.3 million, but the

cost now is budgeted to increase to $13.6 million. The price of the

land to be purchased this year, however, is expected to decrease

from the $1 million originally planned to $966,900.

Crestwood Middle School would get an addition and renovation

after the turn of the century.

Deep Creek

Construction is under way on a new middle school, scheduled to

open in September 1997, and the new Hickory High School, expected to

open in the fall of 1996. Construction also is underway on an

addition and renovations to Deep Creek Middle, scheduled for

completion in January of 1997. Camelot Elementary also is getting a

face lift and addition, to be finished in the fall of 1996. The

money for those projects already has been allocated.

Deep Creek High would get an addition and renovation, which would

be designed this year and would be finished in 1997-98. City Council

last year approved $7.9 million for the project, but cost estimates

have increased to $10.9 million.

A new high school would be constructed in the Grassfield area of

the city to relieve Deep Creek, Great Bridge and the new Hickory

high schools. Land would be purchased in 1996-97 for $804,600, up

from the $774,200 council approved last year. Construction would not

begin until after the turn of the century.

Demolition of Deep Creek Intermediate and construction of a

building to replace it would be pushed back one year, from 1996-97

to 1997-98. Construction, originally budgeted for $9.7 million,

would increase to $13.1 million.

Construction of a new elementary school in the Grassfield area

would be moved up a year to 1999-2000. The school would open in

2001-2002, and would cost $15.7 million to design and construct.

Attendance zones for Deep Creek Intermediate, Deep Creek

Elementary, Deep Creek Central Elementary, Camelot Elementary,

Treakle Elementary and Hickory Elementary would be shifted to make

the best use of space in the area.

Great Bridge/Hickory

Construction is under way this year on a new Hickory Middle

School, which will replace the old Great Bridge Middle North. The

new building is scheduled for completion in September of 1997, and

funding already has been allocated.

Construction is under way this year on a new elementary school on

Cedar Road to relieve crowded Great Bridge Primary and Intermediate

schools. The school is scheduled to be completed by fall of 1996.

Design work already has been done for an addition and renovation

to Great Bridge High. Construction would begin this year and would

be finished in 1997-98, but the cost would go up from $7.1 million

to $7.8 million.

Great Bridge Middle School South would get an addition and a

facelift after the turn of the century, with nearly $1 million in

design work commencing in 1999-2000.

The purchase of land for another new middle school in the Hickory

area, planned for 1997-98, would be pushed back to 1998-99. The cost

would be about the same - $1.3 million.

Planning for a second new elementary school in the Great Bridge

area would be moved up a bit - the land would be purchased this year

for $644,600. Design and construction would begin next year for a

total cost of $14.2 million. The school would open in 1999-2000.

Attendance zones between Butts Road Primary and Intermediate,

Great Bridge Primary and Intermediate and Southeastern Elementary

could be shifted to make better use of space.

KEYWORDS: CHESAPEAKE SCHOOLS CHESAPEAKE SCHOOL BOARD by CNB