Posted: 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2014
Middletown High School may include city
convention center
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/rick-mccrabb/" rel="nofollow - Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN —
Middletown school officials and teachers have toured
three area high schools — Hamilton, Princeton and Huber Heights Wayne — looking for potential
design ideas for the district’s new middle school and renovated high school.
The
district also is seeking input from the community and students to see what they
expect and want out of the district’s buildings that will be funded through the
$95-million bond that passed in May by 22 votes, according to final results
from the Butler
and Warren county boards of elections.
Of
the $95 million, $40 million was supposed to come from the Ohio School
Facilities Commission, but recently it was announced the OSFC approved $51.4
million for the Middletown
district.
It
is expected that on Thursday, $45 million of unlimited tax general obligation
school improvement bonds will be sold by RBC Capital Markets as underwritten
for the district. Superintendent Sam Ison said the district received an A minus
rating, which he called “not bad.”
Eventually,
a new middle school will be built somewhere on the high school campus on Breiel Boulevard,
across the street from Miami University Middletown, and MHS will be renovated
and expanded. George Long, the district’s business manager, told a small group
that recently attended a community meeting, that he envisions building onto the
front portion of the high school.
“We
want to change the feeling of the building,” he said. “A new look … a very
rejuvenated look.”
Middletown high and middle
schools also may be “joined buildings,” Ison said. This concept would allow
staff and students to move more smoothly between the buildings. Long said if
the district combined the high school and middle school together, it would lose
an unknown amount of state funding. But by keeping them separate, the district
can get the “best of both worlds,” he said.
There also has been some discussions on how
to incorporate a convention center into the high school. Middletown has no sites that can host more
than 300 people. Business leaders have said they’d like to keep the larger
events in the city, and they think those could be held at the high school
during the summer.
The
site will have three gyms: the Paul Walker Gym at the high school; the one in
the middle school; and an arena with an undisclosed seating capacity.
District
officials also talked about constructing a central heating and air conditioning
unit that would serve both buildings; the possibility of adding flexibility
into the learning spaces; installing improved security measures; and making the
buildings more accessible for the community to use on nights and weekends.
No
timetable has been set on construction of the middle school and renovations to
the high school.
Long
said the district hopes to make presentations to the community through the
Chamber of Commerce, Middletown Community Foundation and service organizations.
Hmmm...I thought the 10 million dollar restoration of the Manchester Inn that is going to be completed in 2016 was going to serve as the convention center for Middletown...
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