Members of the Sequim School District’s long-range facilities planning group got a look at Sequim High School’s aging science classrooms. The four classrooms were built in 1967. Adjacent to the classrooms is a storage area with rows of chemicals used in classroom studies without nearly the ventilation needed, said Mike Santos, Sequim schools’ director of facilities, operations and security. (Michel Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Members of the Sequim School District’s long-range facilities planning group got a look at Sequim High School’s aging science classrooms. The four classrooms were built in 1967. Adjacent to the classrooms is a storage area with rows of chemicals used in classroom studies without nearly the ventilation needed, said Mike Santos, Sequim schools’ director of facilities, operations and security. (Michel Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Sequim school group reviewing aging facilities for possible funding request

Board directors: Multi-phase plan will be considered

SEQUIM — Sequim School District leaders are doing some homework as they consider asking for community assistance to help replace aging buildings and other facilities.

Long-range facilities planning group members got an up-close look at Helen Haller Elementary School and portions of Sequim High School in June and July. Group members are charged with providing the district’s board of directors with a plan of action, one that may include a capital projects levy or bond, in early October.

At an Aug. 19 Sequim School Board meeting, board director Michael Rocha noted that the district is considering a multi-phased approach to dealing with facility needs.

“[This is] a more comprehensive approach, to break it up into pieces,” he said.

The facilities group will send bring recommendations about levy or bond measure(s), including the cost of each and suggestion of when to place those on ballots, to special board meeting on Oct. 1 or Oct. 3, he said.

“We need to get better at knowing our timetable and not waiting for something to break,” Rocha said.

Board director Larry Jeffryes said he’d like to see the kind of plan similar to a school district at which he worked that had building plans up to 20 and 30 years into the future.

Sequim schools superintendent Regan Nickles noted at the Aug. 19 meeting that even Sequim’s “newer” buildings — Greywolf Elementary and Sequim Middle School — are showing signs of age.

The last bond voters approved was for $25 million in February 1996 to build Sequim Middle School along with new classrooms (H building) and a playfield at Sequim High School.

The middle school opened in 1998. Greywolf Elementary opened in 1991.

Jeffryes said he’d like the district to have a facility improvements plan “so we’re not looking at a decrepit middle school 50 years from now.”

Sequim voters have varied their support for bonds and levies for school construction in recent years. Each of Sequim’s most recent four school bond attempts failed to meet the 60 percent supermajority needed, including an April 2014 proposal for $154.3 million, and proposals in February 2015 ($49.3 million), November 2015 ($49.3 million) and February 2016 ($54 million).

Educational Programs & Operations levies — measures that typically support school programs with additional teaching staff, materials and more — typically pass in Sequim, with its last five attempts exceeding 60 percent — despite now needing only a simple majority for passage.

To learn more about the long-range facilities planning group, go to tinyurl.com/SEQlongrange.

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Michael Dashiell is the editor of the Sequim Gazette of the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which also is composed of other Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News and Forks Forum. Reach him at michael.dashiell@sequimgazette.com.

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