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Board OK's new school for Gateway, remodel for Ruder

CHRIS PETERSON | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 8 months AGO
by CHRIS PETERSON
Chris Peterson is the editor of the Hungry Horse News. He covers Columbia Falls, the Canyon, Glacier National Park and the Bob Marshall Wilderness. All told, about 4 million acres of the best parts of the planet. He can be reached at editor@hungryhorsenews.com or 406-892-2151. | May 15, 2019 7:04 AM

A new school at Glacier Gateway. A remodel of Ruder Elementary.

The School District 6 board Monday night approved that plan as recommended by the district’s Long Range Planning Committee. The final plan comes after the committee met on the project and toured the district’s three elementary schools over the past eight months or so.

The project estimated combined price tag is about $34.36 million with soft costs and added expenses rolled into the budget. Gateway alone will cost an estimated $22 million.

But the board didn’t talk about the costs much Monday night because the estimated costs at this point could change. For example, there’s still talk about rolling the expense of a secured entrance to the junior high into the bond and plans for new soccer and other fields adjacent to Ruder could also be folded in.

The orientation of the schools themselves could even change.

Trustee Michael Nicosia noted the Gateway plan currently had the school facing the Truck Route, and he openly expressed concern about the safety of that option.

The board is expected to narrow down, or expand the project, as the case may be, in the next month or so. A solidified bond request is expected in July, with a vote in September.

Right now, a $34 million bond would equate to an estimated $237 annual tax bill on a home assessed at $200,000 for the 20-year life of the bond. A $400,000 assessed home would see a tax bill of $475.

In 2000, voters approved the $12 million junior high bond issue. That bond is paid off in 2020.

According to L’Heureux Page Werner Architecture’s Steve L’Heureux, the upgraded facilities would not only provide a better learning environment for local elementary students, they would also help draw families to the district, he said on Wednesday during the last long range planning meeting.

“There are a couple of messages that are sent when try to upgrade school facilities. It’s all about trying to create a quality, safe and secure environment for learning. It shows that the community is willing to invest in those sorts of things. It will make people want to come here,” he said.

While the project looks to build a brand new school at Gateway, it still leaves the old junior high standing. There is talk about offering it to the Boys and Girls Club, but the club doesn’t seem to be much interested in that. The new Gateway building would include secure entrances, including a separate kindergarten entrance. It would also have interior courtyards. The Ruder plan also creates a new entrance, a dining area, adds classrooms adjacent to the gym, adds a library and media center, a music room and a teacher’s lounge.

The plan, at least at this point, doesn’t integrate the project with a Boys and Girls Club facility that organizers are planning to build just north of the school.

The district needs the space — the two elementary schools are packed to the gills with students.

But critics of the plan say the district needs to reopen Canyon Elementary School in Hungry Horse, which is largely vacant, save for a community health center.

Canyon was closed several years ago when enrollment dipped.

But school officials say reopening the Canyon would be a costly proposition, and it still wouldn’t solve the needs at the other two schools.

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