Chattanooga Times Free Press

$200 million funding request reflects cost of Memphis’ 2 new high schools

- BY LAURA TESTINO

Memphis-Shelby County Schools is asking the county for more than $200 million in funding for school buildings, both to address maintenanc­e needs at existing schools and to support constructi­on of two new high schools.

The request exceeds even the expanded school buildings budget supported by a county wheel tax increase last year, and it’s not clear how much of it the county can provide. Projected costs for the two new high schools have risen by tens of millions of dollars since county commission­ers approved initial funding for them.

Completing constructi­on of the two new high schools would deliver on a promise to Frayser families, plus the communitie­s at three Germantown

schools the state is forcing the district to close.

The request is also aimed at tackling a long backlog of existing facility needs, including new fire alarm systems, roofs and heating and air upgrades. That list is expected to grow once school officials receive results of an expansive building assessment later this year.

Superinten­dent Marie Feagins and Chief Financial Officer Tito Langston brought the request to the Shelby County Commission, the group that approves the county funds the school system receives, Wednesday. The pending capital request — of which $97 million is for immediate maintenanc­e needs — is a major item in the district’s proposed $1.8 billion budget.

FEAGINS SAYS EXISTING BUILDINGS ARE THE PRIORITY

Feagins pushed back on the notion the district would have to choose between the deferred maintenanc­e projects and the new high schools but said the existing buildings are the priority. This fiscal year, the district dipped into its own fund balance to cover $64 million in building projects after the county committed dollars only to the new high schools.

“We have immediate needs in several buildings, almost 100 buildings, right now,” Feagins told reporters after the presentati­on.

The district is petitionin­g others for funding, too, she said, including the city of Memphis, which has not had a funding relationsh­ip with the district in years.

“There are multiple ways to move this forward,” Feagins said. “I’m confident that we’ll get it done.”

In his own budget presentati­on Wednesday, Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris proposed to continue the existing commitment to the new high schools but said he’d offer an additional funding proposal in December to give county and district officials time to find cost saving options.

“We want to see new schools in more neighborho­ods, and the best way to do that is to make sure that you spend appropriat­ely on the first two new schools,” Harris told reporters.

In an interview last week, Commission­er Mick Wright, who chairs the facilities committee, told Chalkbeat it appeared the county and district could be at an impasse over the schools, especially given the county’s promises to another constructi­on project, the region’s new trauma hospital.

Wright told Chalkbeat on Wednesday he could see the additional funding for the schools being approved if other county projects don’t move forward as planned.

Commission­er Edmund Ford Jr. also expressed doubts about meeting the district’s capital funds request but agreed schools’ maintenanc­e needs should be met.

“I don’t want to get to the point to where we abandon those students, those existing schools, and then we decide to only look at the two new schools,” Ford said.

FEAGINS OUTLINES BUDGET CUTS, INVESTMENT­S

The school system presented a balanced budget that eliminated a $150 million shortfall through a series of position and program cuts meant to focus resources on initiative­s that are working well.

Feagins described her message to staff: “You can have a job. It just may not be the title that you have right now, or the respective department or work location that you’re in.”

In April, Chalkbeat requested updated informatio­n about how the proposed job cuts match up against the 675 cuts district officials proposed to board members in November. The district has not responded to the inquiry.

At the same time, the district proposed some investment­s to go along with a new salary increase for teachers, including:

› $4.2 million for attendance specialist­s, an average cost of $53,000 per school

› $1.5 million toward support personnel at high schools that earned D and F letter grades from the state

› $29.3 million in literacy supports, with a focus on small group instructio­n, family communicat­ion and low performing schools

Feagins also proposed $1.6 million to expand course offerings at Hope Academy, the school inside Shelby County’s juvenile detention center.

District officials expect to offer a more detailed look at the budget during meetings later in May and June with school board members and county commission­ers. Both bodies have to vote to approve the budget before it takes effect in July.

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