Rice Fergus Miller, a Bremerton-based architecture firm, produced this rendering of the new Quileute Tribal School on higher ground. A groundbreaking ceremony for the long-awaited project was held last Thursday, July 2, 2020, in La Push.

Rice Fergus Miller, a Bremerton-based architecture firm, produced this rendering of the new Quileute Tribal School on higher ground. A groundbreaking ceremony for the long-awaited project was held last Thursday, July 2, 2020, in La Push.

Quileute Tribe begins building new school

Children to be moved to site out of tsunami zone

LA PUSH — After years of planning, the Quileute Tribe has broken ground on a massive project to move its school out of the tsunami zone into a shiny new campus on higher ground.

The tribe conducted a groundbreaking ceremony and blessing for the new school last Thursday. About 50 mask-wearing attendees were on hand.

“Today our dream becomes a reality,” Quileute Tribal Chairman Doug Woodruff said in a statement provided by the tribe.

“After almost a decade in the making, next week we start the construction of our brand new school.”

Quileute Tribal Chairman Doug Woodruff speaks during a blessing and groundbreaking ceremony for the new school on higher ground last Thursday. Construction began Monday and is scheduled to be completed in May 2022. (Photo courtesy of the Quileute Tribe)

Quileute Tribal Chairman Doug Woodruff speaks during a blessing and groundbreaking ceremony for the new school on higher ground last Thursday. Construction began Monday and is scheduled to be completed in May 2022. (Photo courtesy of the Quileute Tribe)

Construction of the school began Monday and is scheduled to be completed in May 2022, Quileute Tribe Operations Manager Emily Foster said.

The school is the first phase of a multi-generational effort to move tribal facilities and housing out of the tsunami and storm-prone lower village at La Push on the Pacific coast to a 278-acre tract on higher ground.

The Move to Higher Ground site is about 2 miles southeast of the lower village and about 250 feet above sea level.

Federal legislation signed by President Barack Obama in 2012 transferred hundreds of acres of former Olympic National Park land, including the higher ground site, back to the Quileute Tribe.

“Relocating the tribal school to higher ground is truly a matter of life and death to the Quileute people,” Woodruff said.

“I want to thank school boards, past and present, and tribal councils, past and present. Thank you to our elders, our community and our staff for all their input on this school.”

Future phases of the Move to Higher Ground will relocate the tribe’s senior center, administrative buildings and homes, Foster said.

In 2018, the Quileute Tribe received a $44.1 million grant from the Bureau of Indian Affairs to move its 100-student school from the lower village to a 60,950-square-foot campus on higher ground.

“We can’t wait to see the construction coming along,” Quileute School Board Vice Chairwoman Charlotte Penn said.

“It’s for our students. We’re so excited.”

The new school will have a full-sized gymnasium, library, cafeteria, science and technology labs, language and cultural classrooms, a performing arts stage, vocational shop for woodworking, natural grass athletic fields and space for 175 K-12 students, school and tribal officials have said.

Rice Fergus Miller produced this rendering of the new Quileute Tribal School.

Rice Fergus Miller produced this rendering of the new Quileute Tribal School.

Geologists say a magnitude-9.0 earthquake could re-occur at any time along the Cascadia Subduction Zone and send a 40-foot tsunami crashing into low-lying coastal areas like La Push.

The last Cascadia megathrust earthquake and tsunami occurred at about 9 p.m. Jan. 26, 1700, according to the geological record and written accounts of the tsunami reaching Japan.

Winter storms also pose a hazard for Quileute students, who attend classes a short distance from the surf.

In late 2018, the tribe hired Vanir Construction Management Inc., which has a Port Angeles office, to oversee the design and construction of the new school.

“Living and working on the Peninsula, our team understands the importance of this project to the tribe and the Quileute youth, providing a safe and modern facility to learn and grow within the Quileute culture and heritage,” said Vanir Project Manager Craig Fulton, a former Port Angeles public works and utilities director.

“Our team will serve the tribe as the owner’s representative, guiding the tribe, contractors and consultants through the design, procurement, construction and final move-in phases.”

It was announced Wednesday that Graham Construction & Management of Seattle had been hired to design and build the school.

“Our team has a keen sense of the urgency and responsibility to design and build this new school with attention to the Quileute environment, culture and especially the children,” Graham Project Manager Nancy Hawke said in a statement provided by the tribe.

“I am personally looking forward to seeing their smiles on the first day of school in their new building.”

Quileute officials said the groundbreaking ceremony was kept small due to limited space and COVID-19 restrictions. All attendees were required to wear a mask, Foster said.

The ceremony began with a song and prayer by Quileute elder and minister Tommy Jackson and included remarks by Woodruff, Penn and former school board member and elder Roger Jackson Sr.

Woodruff and Penn then donned hard hats and broke ground on behalf of the tribal council and school board, Foster said.

“This ceremony celebrates the Quileute Tribe’s perseverance to preserve their culture and secure their future for generations to come,” Foster said.

________

Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at rollikainen@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Woman recovered from water off Neah Bay coast

An unidentified woman was recovered by the Neah Bay… Continue reading

Noah Glaude, executive director of the North Olympic Library System, welcomes a crowd to the ceremonial groundbreaking of the Sequim Library expansion on Wednesday. (Michael Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim library breaks ground

3,800-square-foot expansion expected to be complete by spring 2025

Citizen of the Year Susie Brandelius with the Forks Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Lissy Andros, who caught up with Brandelius on Monday to present her award and flowers. (Christi Baron/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Forks chamber celebrates community awards

Citizen, volunteer, business of the year lauded

Flight operations set for this week

There will be field carrier landing practice operations for aircraft… Continue reading

Brinnon man in custody after search

A Brinnon man who was wanted after allegedly breaking into… Continue reading

The U.S. Coast Guard cutter Anacapa is being decommissioned after 34 years of service, the last of which had the ship homeported in Port Angeles. A ceremony Friday bid farewell to the vessel, which will make its final journey to the Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore, Maryland in the coming weeks. (Peter Segall / Peninsula Daily News)
Port Angeles-based cutter Anacapa decommissioned

110-foot vessel is one of few remaining Island-class cutters

PASD board approves pact with paraeducators

Two-year agreement hikes salary steps, wages

Acting city clerk Heather Robley, right, swears in new city council member Nicole Hartman on Monday after she was appointed to fill former mayor Tom Ferrell’s seat. Hartman will serve through certification of the 2025 general election. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Hartman named to Sequim council

PUD staffer to serve in former mayor’s seat

Poulsbo man dies in wreck south of Hood Canal Bridge

A Poulsbo man died in a vehicle collision in… Continue reading

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Clallam County to discuss Elwha River watershed

Meetings across Clallam and Jefferson counties

Department of Ecology declares statewide drought emergency

Clallam County PUD #1 is requesting that water utility… Continue reading

Clallam County Fire District Captain Marty Martinez sprays water on a hot spot of a fire that destroyed a house and adjoining RV in the 700 block of East Kemp Street near Port Angeles on Friday morning. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
One found dead in fire east of Port Angeles

House, garage destroyed in Kemp Street blaze