Task Force Recommends
Major Investment In School Buildings Throughout Rhode Island
The Rhode Island
School Building Task Force, chaired by General Treasurer Seth Magaziner and
Education Commissioner Ken Wagner, has developed a plan to make a once-in-a-generation investment to public schools
throughout the state.
"Every child
deserves to go to a school that is warm, safe, dry and equipped for 21st
century learning, but too many of our public school buildings are
failing," said Treasurer Magaziner. "We cannot afford to wait any
longer to take action so this group has developed a plan to do right by our
children by repairing our school buildings all across the state."
To encourage school
districts to embark on more school repair and construction projects, the Task
Force recommends a system of targeted increases to the state's share
of school construction projects, prioritizing projects to improve the
safety, 21st century learning environments and operational efficiency of
schools.
"We appreciate the feedback we've
heard from the Task Force members and from students, educators, and families
across the state, and the report is reflective of the collective vision we
share in which all students have access to 21st century learning environments."
The 19-member Task
Force was convened by Governor Raimondo in September after an independent study
identified more than $2.2 billion in deficiencies in the state's 306 public
schools, more than $600 million of which are immediate "warm, safe, and dry"
needs.
The report also found
that the state's current level of support is causing the cost of repairing
these deficiencies to grow by an average of $70 million per
year.
The Task Force
recommends issuing $500 million of state General Obligation bonds for public
school construction and repair over the next 10 years, with the first
bonds to be proposed to voters in a referendum in 2018.
This level of bonding
is less than half of the state's total capacity to issue bonds over the next
decade, according to the state's Debt Affordability study completed earlier
this year. While other states regularly issue bonds to support school
construction, Rhode Island has not done so for more than 20 years.
Additionally, the Task
Force recommends introducing new statewide requirements to
ensure that buildings are properly maintained after they are repaired, and a
series of new policies to limit construction cost overruns.
The final
recommendations of the Rhode Island School Building Task Force were approved
unanimously by the 15 members present at their December 13 meeting,
with one abstention.
House Finance Committee Chairman and Task Force
member Marvin Abney had previously informed the group that he would abstain
from the final vote out of deference to his committee's responsibility to
consider the bonds in the upcoming legislative session.