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Dateline: September
6,
2001
Hedley
school takes on $1 million building
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Hedley
Public Schools will soon be embarking on a $1 million new building
following receipt of a grant recently.
Superintendent
Bryan Hill said the Hedley Independent School District was notified of the
grant during the first week of August by the Texas Education Agency.
The
new facility will be located on the current school grounds, west of the
Owl Gym and south of the main school building. After completion, the main
entrance to the school will face west instead of south as it now does.
Plans
call for four new classrooms and a combination multipurpose
library/auditorium area. One of the new classrooms will be a lecture hall,
and the multipurpose room will include computers, which will be wired to
the Internet and accessible by community members.
The
new facility will nearly double the space of the main school building,
Hill said. The building will be of a metal frame construction with a metal
roof and a masonry veneer exterior similar to the Bronco Gym in Clarendon,
he said.
Architect
Steven Butler of Canyon is currently drawing plans for the project. School
officials hope to have the job completed sometime early in the 2002-2003
school year.
Hill
said HISD originally applied for the TEA Instructional Facilities
Allotment grant in 1999 and has been reapplying every year. The grant will
cover approximately 83 percent of the cost of the new building. The
remainder of the cost will be picked up by HISD taxpayers with 15-year
bonds.
In
November 1999, school district voters approved issuance of bonds to cover
the district’s match by a margin of 96-30. The condition of the vote was
that the bonds would not be issued until the school was awarded the grant.
“Community
support has been overwhelming,” Hill said.
While
other area rural schools are facing declining enrollments, the Hedley
school has been on the upswing. Hill said 115 kids attended Hedley ten
years ago. That number is now 189, growing steadily for the last seven
years.
The
school attracts approximately 50 transfer students from Clarendon,
Memphis, and Wellington, Hill said.
More
improvements may be in store for HISD’s physical plant. Hill said the
district is currently working on a grant application that would renovate
the roof of the main building and update the facility to meet the
requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
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