MANITOWOC, WI (WTAQ-WLUK) – It’s a problem that school districts across the state and country are dealing with: declining enrollment. The Manitowoc Public School District (MPSD) is no different.
Last year, MPSD requested an audit of all the district facilities, to understand what the district needs to improve their learning environments.
“I wasn’t here, I don’t know why we didn’t do this 10 years ago,” says MPSD Superintendent James Feil while holding a 319-page building audit, which the district received in May.
“We have a significant backlog of deferred maintenance,” Feil says. “Essentially we’ve not been doing what we need to do to maintain our facilities, keep them new, keep them modernized.”
Feil says the audit confirmed what they already knew, but showed them just how dire the situation is.
It reports there are safety and security issues district-wide.
“The current conditions do not support a 21st-century educational environment,” the executive summary of the audit reads.
“The most important critical needs, $47M dollars for, you know, we could spend easily in two years to bring that up, but about $163M in a 10-year period of time in terms of what we would expect to maintain the facilities. Not to modernize them, just to maintain them,” Feil says.
Much like other school districts, including Green Bay, Manitowoc is dealing with declining enrollment. The audit shows that all the school buildings in the district are being underutilized.
“We could operate two less elementary schools, considering all our schools, it could be elementary schools. Two less than what we need to manage our current enrollment,” he adds.
Now, Feil is recommending a 3-phase 15 to 20-year plan to school board members. He sent the recommended plan to board members last week.
The first phase would be immediate.
The district would take out $15 to $20M in loans to turn the district’s alternative school, Stangel, into an elementary school, and close two of the district’s oldest and most costly elementary schools. Jackson, Madison, Franklin, and Riverside are all being considered for closure.
Phase two involves a 2026 referendum, which would allow the district to complete maintenance on the remaining elementary schools.
It would also close both of the district’s middle schools, Washington and Wilson, and build a new middle school where all students would consolidate into. It would also build a technology center in the school.
Phase three would require a referendum in 2040, which would enable the district to build an entirely new high school, replacing Lincoln High, for $200M, or refurbish the existing building for $90M.
Feil is hoping board members can approve the plan by July 9, but some board members say the process is moving too quickly. The full, finished audit was just received in May, according to Paul ‘Biff’ Hansen, a school board member.
“My feeling is if you go and close a grade school, you should go and have a meeting at the school with the parents there or will have students there in the next couple years, and you should also have city-input from people that are going to be paying those bills, and we haven’t had that,” Hansen says.
FOX 11 asked Superintendent Feil if the district’s situation was so dire, that a decision had to be made quickly, without consulting or receiving input from district families.
He replied, “Well time is money and, you know, also in terms of what you would reasonably expect, are parents in a position to make the best decision in terms of what facilities to keep or not?”
Feil says the timeline is compressed because if they don’t take action now, the district will go deeper into the hole.
Once the board approves the plan, Feil says, they will then have conversations with families before officially deciding which schools to close.
But Hansen criticizes that decision and feels as if a decision has already been made.
“So, you’re not really getting public input, you’ll get it after you’ve decided. public input should be here’s some options this is what we are thinking of doing, we can go this direction, this direction, this direction. But, you have input into that and that’s not what’s happening now.”
“As an elected board member, before I vote on anything I need to know what the money is going to be spent on, and need to know most importantly, do the people of the community agree with the path we are taking.”
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