SAISD Votes to Demolish Old School

 

A few historical sections of a local school will soon be abated and demolished in San Angelo, beginning with the removal of asbestos from certain parts of the buildings.

Board members of the San Angelo Independent School District (SAISD) motioned to approve the abatement and demolition of the old Lincoln Middle School at Monday’s school board meeting. 

Steve Van Hoozer, Director of Bond Planning and Construction, said, “[the demolition] includes from the 1910 version on the north end of the building, the 1928 portion, the 1938 portion and the 1952 portion of that building.”

This section of the school includes parts that were damaged by a tornado in May of 1953.

Van Hoozer said, “We will leave the buildings that were built in the ‘90s.”

Along with that a metal band hall, the cafeteria that was built in the ‘80s and a gym built in the early ‘60s will also remain.

Five bids were offered for the project. AAR, Inc. was chosen for the job with a total cost of $407,590 for the abatement, contingency, and demolition of the old Lincoln campus. The cost also includes the demolition of Blackshear portable.

“This is a project that has been on the books for a significant amount of time,” board member Bill Dendle said.

Board President Lanny Layman said, “I think this is something that will be really appreciated in the neighborhood and will obviously result in having a safer area, not only in the neighborhood, but for students too.”

The project is scheduled to begin Jan. 13.

Van Hoozer also gave an update on the School Bond 2008. According to SAID, “The bond proposal designates $117 million in school bonds to pay for work at Holiman, Bradford, Reagan, Glenmore, San Jacinto, Santa Rita, Crockett and Goliad elementary schools, Lee Middle School, and Central and Lake View high schools.”

Van Hoozer said that Central, Glenmore, Bradford, Reagan, and Lake View are the only projects remaining to be completed.

The school board also the lease and resolution concerning the district’s facilities use agreement with MHMR.

According to SAISD, “MHMR of the Concho Valley has obtained grant funding in order to establish and operate an Autism Treatment Program which will provide services to students with disabilities residing in Coke, Concho, Crockett, Irion, Reagan, Sterling and Tom Green Counties.”

MHMR will use the San Jacinto Clinic for the Autism Treatment Program. The location was previously a school-based clinic where nursing and social work students from ASU obtained training experience.

Dr. Carol Ann Bonds, Superintendent of SAISD, said, “For the first year or two it will just be students from SAISD...after that the grant that MHMR has received for several years will open the doors.

“Once they get this new clinic and the running of it efficient, they will open it up to autistic children from surrounding counties…they will not pay rent like someone from the outside."

MHMR will pay a "very small amount" so that the children are ablet get services at a reduced cost.

An approval for new vehicles for transportation was also made at the meeting. By law the district is not allowed to buy new charter buses. Therefore, the district will purchase two used Van Hool Coaches from ABC Texas Bus Sales for a total cost of $462,800.

For more information about the San Angelo School District visit saisd.org 

Subscribe to the LIVE! Daily

The LIVE! Daily is the "newspaper to your email" for San Angelo. Each content-packed edition has weather, the popular Top of the Email opinion and rumor mill column, news around the state of Texas, news around west Texas, the latest news stories from San Angelo LIVE!, events, and the most recent obituaries. The bottom of the email contains the most recent rants and comments. The LIVE! daily is emailed 5 days per week. On Sundays, subscribers receive the West Texas Real Estate LIVE! email.

Required

Most Recent Videos

Comments

I am a Lake View graduate and grew up with Lincoln just a block from my grandmother's house. I went to Lincoln and was always amazed at how well the building survived the tornado of 1953. I have family members, my aunt and a cousin, that took shelter in that building during the tornado while attending school. I think it would be a shame to tear it down. Asbestos abatement and remodeling the building to make it apartments would make sense to me and would be less expensive than tearing it down to build any thing new. That building is a part of my family history and it breaks my heart that people who have no such memories of the school want it torn down. All across the country, cities are re-claiming and re-using buildings to preserve history and it seems San Angelo is trying to remove any "bad" moments in history and only glorify parts of our history. Embrace it all or just level all of San Angelo and start over.

Post a comment to this article here: