Task force to decide fate of Building No. 300 programs
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Angelique Flores
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- The community at Fountain Valley High School has
formed a task force to help direct the fate of programs held in Building
No. 300.
The 30-year-old building is not equipped with earthquake protections
and doesn’t meet modern safety codes, and Huntington Beach Union High
School District officials want to demolish it before it becomes unsafe.
The district, however, has only enough money to replace the
55,000-square-foot building with one about half the size.
The existing building houses a cafeteria, the band room, wood and auto
shop classrooms, a photography lab, vocal music program room, and drama
and technology classrooms. The new building would include mainly a
cafeteria and restrooms.
Staff, parents and students say they are concerned that without space,
these programs will disappear.
“The building could be repaired, but the cost is nearly as much to
repair as to replace,” said Ed Baker, the district’s assistant
superintendent of facilities.
District staff is working to get more funding from the state, either
through grants or a bond, and the rest of the building will be replaced
if that effort is successful, officials said.
But the future of Building No. 300 looks grim.
“Most people realize it has to come down. The question is just when,”
Baker said.
The task force will help answer that question.
The group is comprised of teachers representing programs that may be
affected, students in those programs and student leaders.
“We’ll look at options and ultimately give recommendations,” Principal
Connie Mayhugh said.
The task force met Tuesday and is expected to meet again several times
this month. It plans to have recommendations prepared by December. A
geotechnical engineer will attend future meetings to elaborate on options
for the building.
The committee will also advise the district on what to do about the
possible loss of space if Building No. 300 is torn down. One option is to
use portable classrooms to house programs that wouldn’t fit into the new,
smaller building.
“It would be an easier task if we had the funds to replace the
building in kind, but we don’t,” Baker said.
The next task force meeting is tentatively scheduled for Wednesday.
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