It wasn鈥檛 long ago that, in response to numerous complaints of students sweltering in their classrooms, Gov. David Ige proclaimed that he would commit $100 million to cool 1,000 classrooms.

At the end of the 2016 legislative session, he signed appropriating the funds to the Department of Education, and in 2018 he t during his re-election campaign.

As KHON2 , the $100 million covered only about one-tenth of public school classrooms in Hawaii. Those classrooms received solar-powered systems costing an average of $40,000 per classroom.

Fast forward a little, and we see that some schools that received the units found that they either have started breaking down or will only work for a short time every day.

KITV, in a , reported that one school, Niu Valley Middle School in east Honolulu, reported more than 300 heat-related visits to the school nurse鈥檚 office over the course of four months (August through November). That鈥檚 between three and four kids per school day needing medical attention. Ouch.

Portable air-conditioning units were installed in a portable classroom at Campbell High School in 2017. Cooling Hawaii’s schools remains a big and costly challenge. Suevon Lee/Civil Beat/2017

One teacher, writing about his experience on the Facebook group, said that his school administration tried to fix the situation: 鈥淭he DOE brought in a team of state workers to evaluat[e], and their recommendation? Wait for a sunny day so the batteries can charge.鈥

In the six weeks that followed, he reports, there were plenty of sunny days but the air conditioners in his classroom and his neighbor鈥檚 classroom still don鈥檛 work.

Net Zero

Not only that, air-conditioning upgrades may make matters worse at times. When some companies install the upgrades, they fix the windows so they can鈥檛 be opened, as KHON2 reported. If the unit fails for whatever reason, using the trade winds is no longer an option.

Why solar-powered air conditioning? Because the DOE is under a mandate to have net zero electrical consumption to meet Hawaii’s green energy goals.

Is there a way out of this mess?

The DOE thinks so, as it has rolled out a program that allows basic, affordable window units if the DOE staff verifies that the school鈥檚 electrical system can handle the extra load.

It turns out that the DOE recently completed a large project to replace 700,000 light bulbs at Oahu schools with more efficient LED bulbs, reducing electric usage and creating the capacity to install air conditioning while still being 鈥渘et zero.鈥

Air-conditioning upgrades may make matters worse at times.

In a , DOE鈥檚 assistant superintendent for facilities and operations describes the window units: 鈥淭hese are less complex units from installation to maintenance, where we鈥檙e not having to tear down walls or install solar panels or battery systems. It will be easier for our schools to maintain these units rather than having to contract out for maintenance service,鈥 she said.

鈥淭hings can be done much, much cheaper,鈥 KHON2 quotes HSTA President Corey Rosenlee as saying. 鈥淵ou can probably do a classroom for $2,000 where before it cost $100,000. If a wall unit falls apart after 10 years, then you can replace it. It鈥檚 easy to look back now and say we should have done this five years ago.鈥

Okay, so where does that leave us?

We spent a massive amount of money on our schools a few years ago and have gotten questionable results. We have since identified a much cheaper and more efficient path toward addressing the health and safety issue that still plagues our keiki.

Educators, are there lessons to be learned from all of this? If so, tell your administrators! Let鈥檚 learn from this debacle and use our public money more efficiently next time.

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