Another Hot School Year Looms As Air Conditioning Initiative Delayed
The Hawaii Department of Education says it won’t fulfill its goal of cooling the air聽in 1,000 classrooms by the end of 2016 because of increased construction costs.
Plans to cool off classrooms throughout Hawaii have been delayed, an assistant superintendent told state Board of Education members Tuesday.
The department鈥檚 initiative to add air conditioning to 1,000 classrooms has been slowed by high costs resulting from increased construction demand and a shortage of skilled labor, said Dann Carlson, assistant superintendent for the Office of School Facilities and Support Services.
鈥淭here鈥檚 just a huge drain on the industry right now,鈥 Carlson said. 鈥淗ence our decision to start negotiating with some of these contractors. We鈥檙e taking a pause.鈥
The department received more than $100 million from the Legislature to add air conditioning to 1,000 classrooms throughout the state. Hawaii Gov. David Ige said he was working with the DOE and private companies to accomplish that goal before the end of the year at聽his state of the state address in January.
Now that deadline will be pushed back, but the department isn鈥檛 sure by how much. The revised schedule includes reopening bidding in July. The department currently has about 50 pre-qualified contractors, Carlson said.
鈥淭he good thing is, we鈥檝e got some really large names on there,鈥 he told board members. 鈥淪ome construction companies that are certainly capable of the workload that we鈥檙e looking at.鈥
A combination of high costs and fewer bids than anticipated caused the department to push back the deadline, Carlson explained in an opinion piece in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser. He cited an example of a $135,000 bid for photovoltaic-powered air conditioning. The original estimated cost was聽about聽$20,000.
鈥淚f we go with the bids we received so far, we will cool fewer classrooms at a price that is unacceptable,鈥 he wrote.
The Hawaii State Teachers Association supported the DOE鈥檚 decision and put the blame on contractors who provided much lower bids earlier, the union聽wrote in .
鈥淲e must not hastily adopt solutions that will deny thousands of children a constructive learning environment and jeopardize their well-being,鈥 wrote Corey Rosenlee, president of HSTA. 鈥淲e must, instead, urge private contractors turn their expertise into reasonable bids to make our schools as cool as the dreams to which our children aspire.鈥
However, the聽union聽did offer an alternative at the school board meeting. Wilbert Holck, executive director of HSTA, suggested the schools reach out to their respective community councils to try to get more local contractors bidding.
鈥淚n every school’s community, there are electricians, there are solar people and others who may be willing to install these air conditioners for a cheaper rate or free,鈥 Holck said. 鈥淲e see this happening all the time when a community gets involved with a school.”
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