Latest news with #turffield
Yahoo
5 days ago
- General
- Yahoo
New turf football field with lights coming to Pierce County school district
Soon, Roy Anderson Field won't be the Peninsula School District's only high school turf football field. The Gig Harbor Tides will get their own lit turf field if all goes according to schedule next year, helping plug another hole in the supply of athletic fields playable in fair and rainy weather in the Gig Harbor and Key Peninsula areas. The district also plans to address several other needs at its facilities and campuses, according to a presentation from Director of Facilities Patrick Gillespie at the school board meeting on May 20. Those issues include poor drainage at the district's two high school baseball fields and an outdated auditorium lighting system at Peninsula High School. ' ... we're really excited about this project and what it would bring,' Gillespie said about Gig Harbor's future turf field at the meeting. 'We hear all the time that we need more fields for our student athletes.' The district plans to install field lighting, re-spray the track surfacing, add a scoreboard and flag pole, install 8-foot fencing and convert the grass field to synthetic turf at Gig Harbor High School's lower field, Gillespie said at the meeting. The field will accommodate football and soccer and have reference marks for boys and girls lacrosse, discus and javelin, he said. The district is working with consultant D.A. Hogan. The company has worked on turf fields throughout the Puget Sound area, including at Mount Tahoma High School and Stadium High School, and Gig Harbor High School's upper field, according to the D.A. Hogan website. The district is working on design concepts for Gig Harbor's turf football field and plans to put the project out to bid in the spring of next year. If all goes well, construction should begin around April or May 2026 and run through the end of September that year, Gillespie told the board. Since the project is still in its early stages, there isn't an official timeline or cost estimate yet, according to district spokesperson Danielle Chastaine. The district will first gather input from its athletic teams and coaches about the field's condition and specific needs, then will begin requesting proposals from contractors and determining cost projections, she wrote in an email. She added that funding for the project will come from the district's capital projects budget, which draws from multiple sources including levies, bonds, impact fees and state match funding grants. The money in this fund also collects interest over time. No additional levy or bond dollars will be necessary to fund the field project, she wrote. The district will be working with a consultant to assess the infield dirt at both the Gig Harbor High School and Peninsula High School baseball fields, and the fastpitch softball field at Peninsula, Gillespie said at the meeting. The assessment 'could lead to removing existing infield dirt and replacing (it) with new,' he said. It's a step toward addressing long-term drainage issues at the baseball fields, but the announcement didn't completely satisfy the Gig Harbor Peninsula Youth Sports Coalition, which posted a response to the meeting on Facebook on May 22. 'Unfortunately, and surprisingly, there was no mention of converting any of the dirt infields to artificial turf, which could significantly improve year-round usability and safety,' the post said. Michael Perrow, a founding member of the coalition, told The News Tribune in a phone call that he would like to see more opportunities for public input in the district's decision-making process related to its athletic fields, such as via questionnaires and public open houses. Kevin Owens, a former coach for the Peninsula High School baseball team from 2016 to 2018, told The News Tribune in a phone call that he does remember the field at Peninsula getting 'mushy.' He sees drainage as a problem across the state because of the rainy weather, he said. 'Other than getting turf, what other solution do you have?' Owens said. Drainage issues at the two fields go back decades, former players and a former coach told The News Tribune. Gig Harbor High School's field has had particular issues because of its proximity to wetlands. A few days of rain can make the field unplayable, causing players to miss out on outdoor playing time, The News Tribune reported. Other school and parks districts in the Pacific Northwest have converted their baseball fields to artificial turf in recent years, including at PenMet Parks' Sehmel Homestead Park and schools in Skagit and Clark counties. School board member David Olson asked Gillespie at the board meeting if it might be possible to raise the Gig Harbor High School baseball field, which he described as 'the swamp,' so that the players aren't 'running around in a bunch of mud during the games.' That option 'would be a pretty massive undertaking,' Gillespie said. '... there would be a lot of work and costs associated with that.' Gillespie added in response to a question about the purpose of replacing the dirt that the typical options for dirt are sand, clay, or a combination, and certain soil types are better-suited to certain kinds of weather. Sand is better to help the field drain in the winter months, but turns the field into a 'sand pit' in the summer, he said. Clay is better for the summer but worse in the winter, 'so you tend to go with something in between,' he continued. He said that he's talked to people involved in working on other fields including at Seattle's T-Mobile Park — a grass field with a specially designed drainage system including 'layers of drainage pipe, pea gravel, sand, and grass,' according to the Major League Baseball website — and has gotten conflicting opinions on what works best. The consultant will be able to share insights into how the district can address its issues with the water-logged fields, according to Gillespie. District spokesperson Danielle Chastaine did not immediately respond when asked by The News Tribune about the cost of working with the consultant. The district also plans to replace the aging outfield fence at Gig Harbor High School's baseball field and look into adding more storage space there this summer, he said. Another aging system will also get an upgrade: Peninsula High School's electrical/dimmer panel system and associated lighting for the auditorium. The estimated cost is $150,000, according to Director of Career and Technical Education Kelsey Parke. The school's electrical/dimmer panel system, which controls lighting in the auditorium and is also known as the 'matrix,' is over 50 years old, Parke wrote in an email Wednesday. It's used by students in the school's drama program to control lighting during theater productions. 'While it was well known that our auditorium lighting was outdated, stepping into my role as the new director provided a fresh perspective on our fiscal responsibility,' Parke wrote. 'We realized that the amount being spent on ASB lighting rentals was nearly equal to the ticket revenue brought in from each production.' A student representative at the board meeting who has participated in school drama productions expressed enthusiasm for the new system, saying that the company that made the old system doesn't exist anymore and that there aren't any manuals available online. The district will begin the process of replacing the panel system in July, and will upgrade the lighting systems before September, according to Parke. The district will provide training to students and staff to use the new equipment, and students will also be able to access it through courses like 'Theater Tech: Lights and Sound' as they 'gain hands-on experience designing lighting sequences for upcoming productions,' she wrote.

Yahoo
11-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Massena Central superihtendent addresses capital project public concerns
May 11—MASSENA — With the vote coming up this month for a proposed $79.8 million capital project, Massena Central School Superintendent Ronald P. Burke addressed what he saw as some of the public's concerns during the school board's monthly meeting. "When we talk about that $80 million project, it's an investment in our facilities, to maintain our facilities, to keep our facilities viable for student occupation, and for teachers and staff to be in our buildings. Just like your houses, we have to do maintenance. This is really not a glamorous project. When this project ends, I'm not sure who's going to want to come for a ribbon-cutting ceremony. It's not real pretty," he said. But, he added, "There are things in our capital project that people are going to argue about and think are unnecessary. One of them, and I'll just pull the bandage back here right now, and that is the turf," he said. The turf field had been installed in 2009, at a time when current school board member Timothy J. Hayes was serving as the district's athletic director. It was first used in September 2009 for a varsity football game. "The turf is at the end of its life expectancy. When that turf was put in, it probably had a life expectancy of 10 to 15 years and we're there. When it gets to the point that it fails the compression test, we can't use it," Burke said. He said it's not a matter of "just pulling the carpet out and throwing grass seed down." "The sub base of the turf field is not the sub base for a grass field. So, if that turf fails and we have to replace it and the community says we want grass, we can do grass. But, it means a whole rebuild of that area," he said. "At some point, the community decided they wanted the turf. They felt that was the investment for the future, and it was also hopefully expressed that there's an ongoing maintenance cost to this. Every decade or so you're going to be re-pulling that out and putting new carpet down." Another portion of the project would address bus electrification at the district's bus garage. "That is about a $2.4 million proposition of that $80 million, and I think enough people have heard me already talk about my concern about electric buses and the whole process. However, as of last night, we had very firm deadlines. The original deadline to purchase electric buses was 2027. You could ask for a waiver for two years. So, by 2029 you could not purchase anything but an electric bus. They're not going to make diesels. They're not going to be allowed to be sold to schools in New York state. That is state law," Burke said. "The other part is that by 2035 whatever diesel or gasoline buses you're running, you no longer are allowed to use. Every bus has to be electric." He said they were planning for a worst-case scenario by including the electrification in the capital project. "I'm going to call it the way I see it. I look at this as our worst-case scenario that nothing changes with the law So, that $2.4 million is a really a plan. We'll plan for it. We will identify how we're going to electrify and put the charging stations where they're going to go. But, when it comes time for this, we're not going to go out for bid on this project until late 2026 or early 20276. My hope is that the law truly changes and just because it's there doesn't mean we have to use it," Burke said. He said, if the law changes and the school board agrees, the district will continue to use the conventional buses. "We will scrap that $2.4 million electrification plan and we'll go to Plan B. Plan B is our diesel, our gasoline tanks are now approaching the 20-year mark, and we know that about year 25 we're probably going to be ordered by the DEC (Department of Environmental Conservation) to replace those. So, instead of spending $2.4 million on electrification, hopefully we're talking about a price tag of somewhere around maybe a half a million to three-quarters of a million to replace those two tanks," he said. He said they had to include the electrification in case it was included in the state budget, which had not yet been approved when the school board met. "We're going to be voting in less than two weeks. We had to include that because we have no idea where the budget was going to go or how the law could possibly change," Burke said. The pool and the girl's locker room also needed to be addressed, he said. "I think there are some things that are truly essential, and then we're always going to have some disagreement about is that line item really necessary or not necessary," he said. Isabel Beard, the student representative to the school board, agreed that the project was necessary. She said her math teacher had to move to the computer lab because "there was literally stuff falling from the ceiling and causing students to cough." "So, I think, coming from a student perspective, living in the school almost eight hours every day, five days a week, while it looks nice on the outside, you really start to notice the issues in the school. So, while I think there might be some debate on the justification for what we're looking to improve, I think the improvements are necessary," she said.