Wednesday, January 22, 2025
15.0°F

MLSD seeking to sell two land parcels

CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 6 months, 3 weeks AGO
by CHERYL SCHWEIZER
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | July 1, 2024 3:10 AM

MOSES LAKE — The Moses Lake School Board will hold a public hearing at its July 25 meeting to take public comment on a resolution to declare two parcels of district property surplus. Board members approved the resolution at their regular meeting Thursday.

One of the two pieces is about one-half acre at the intersection of Second Street NE and East Wheeler Road, near the JR Simplot facility. Project Manager Brian Sewell said it’s too small for any school district use. 

“It really has no room for the district to do anything on it, except pay taxes and make sure you’re taking care of the (noxious) weeds,” he said.

The second parcel is on East Yonezawa Boulevard, next to the site of the new Samaritan Hospital, currently under construction. Grant County officials have expressed interest in that property as a possible site for a new county morgue.

The morgue is currently located in Samaritan Hospital, but Grant County Central Services Director Tom Gaines said in an earlier interview that the new hospital site doesn’t have enough room for the facility county officials think they will need as the county’s population grows. Gaines said during the school board meeting that county officials had first asked about buying a section of the property in November 2023, talking with then-Chief Operations Officer Jeremy O’Neil. O’Niel resigned in May.

County officials are interested in buying 2.75 acres. Gaines said he originally asked about another piece of district property across Yonezawa Boulevard, but O’Neil made the alternative suggestion of the parcel county officials are interested in now.

“In January, I talked to (O’Neil) about getting a formal appraisal. The county offered to do that, we paid for that, and that was delivered to the school district in March,” Gaines said. “There were two offers made — a verbal offer for $360,000, and an offer for $114,000 when Jeremy negotiated down the amount of land.”

After the appraisal was delivered school district officials stopped responding, Gaines said. With the new hospital under construction county officials need an answer, he said, and asked district officials to give some consideration to the county’s request.

Sewell said the property is not a separate parcel, although it could be broken off as a separate piece. The resolution approved by the school board would surplus about 89,000 square feet. 

Sewell recommended including some requirements for design, so anything built on the property fits in with the existing MLSD buildings, the skills center, the transportation center and Vanguard Academy. Provisions for driveway access also will be part of any sale, he said. He recommended that the district do its own appraisal.

Sale of the land may be beneficial as the school district looks to shore up funding after two levy proposals failed in front of voters earlier this year.

Cheryl Schweizer can be reached via email at cschweizer@columbiabasinherald.com.

    This parcel of land at the intersection of Second Street and Wheeler Road in Moses Lake is about half an acre in size and the Moses Lake School District is considering its sale.
 
 
    The land depicted here is roughly 89,000 square feet in size and is located near other school district property on Yonezawa Way in Moses Lake. Grant County is interested in buying the property as the location for a new county morgue.
 
 


MORE STORIES

Ballots coming for levy proposals in local districts
Columbia Basin Herald | Updated 1 year ago
Yonezawa roundabout workshop set
Columbia Basin Herald | Updated 6 months ago

ARTICLES BY CHERYL SCHWEIZER

Informational meeting on Wahluke capital levy Jan. 28
January 22, 2025 2:50 a.m.

Informational meeting on Wahluke capital levy Jan. 28

MATTAWA — Wahluke School District officials will be available to answer questions on the district’s capital levy request at an 11:30 a.m. presentation on Jan. 28 at the Sagebrush Senior Center, 23 Desert Aire Drive SW, Desert Aire. The levy’s purpose is to pay off debt and and upgrade safety infrastructure in school buildings.

AC commissioner says county may get monetary help for mandated services, or not
January 22, 2025 3 a.m.

AC commissioner says county may get monetary help for mandated services, or not

RITZVILLE — Adams County Commissioner Dan Blankenship said one of Adams County’s biggest challenges is finding the money to fund all the services it’s required to provide. Nor is Adams County alone, which is why county officials from throughout the state are looking to the 2025 Washington Legislature for some monetary help meeting mandates the state has placed on them.

WA car insurance rates up more than 15% in 2025
January 21, 2025 2 a.m.

WA car insurance rates up more than 15% in 2025

MOSES LAKE — Like pretty much everything else, the cost of car insurance is going up – and in Washington, it’s going up by a hefty percentage. Divya Sangam, insurance specialist for LendingTree.com, said in a press release that car insurance rates in Washington are going up by an average of 17.2% in 2025.