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Public school construction bill advances amid support, labor concerns
-- Hawaii Tribune Herald Hawaii: April 07, 2026 [ abstract]


A proposal to overhaul how Hawaii builds public schools is advancing at the state Capitol, as lawmakers seek faster, more cost-effective solutions to overcrowding and rapid growth in areas like Kapolei and Ewa on Oahu, with a key decision scheduled for this morning.
Senate Bill 2024 would authorize the Hawaii School Facilities Authority to partner with private developers to design, finance and build public school facilities — including on privately owned land — and launch a pilot program to develop three new schools across the state.
The measure comes as stakeholders acknowledge that Hawaii has some of the highest public school construction costs in the nation, making it difficult to keep pace with demand for classrooms.
“The thought is, we cannot build schools the old way,” said Riki Fujitani, executive director of the School Facilities Authority. “They’re too expensive, and it’s too slow.”
 


-- VICTORIA BUDIONO
New Virginia laws target school construction and classroom cellphone use
-- Virginia Mercury Virginia: April 07, 2026 [ abstract]

Framing education as a cornerstone of her administration, Gov. Abigail Spanberger on Tuesday signed a sweeping package of legislation aimed at strengthening K-12 schools, expanding career pathways and reducing classroom distractions across Virginia.

The measures, many of which passed the legislature with bipartisan or unanimous support, span much of the public education system — from school construction and academic standards to student safety, mental health and family engagement.

Two priorities stand out in the package, both of which lawmakers from both parties have deemed urgent: long-term planning for school infrastructure and limits on cellphone use during the school day.

Lawmakers approved legislation to make the Commission on School Construction and Modernization permanent and require a 10-year capital improvement roadmap through House Bill 544 and Senate Bill 498. The move is intended to bring more consistency and predictability to how Virginia maintains and upgrades its aging school facilities.

The effort builds on bipartisan work that gained traction under former Gov. Glenn Youngkin to address infrastructure gaps across school divisions and better coordinate state and local investments. A 2022 state report found nearly 1,000 school buildings statewide are at least 50 years old and estimated it would cost over $25 billion to replace. 


-- Markus Schmidt
Northside ISD pauses bond upgrades at 9 elementary schools because of declining enrollment
-- San Antonio Report Texas: April 06, 2026 [ abstract]


Northside Independent School District is not making building improvements at nine of its more than 80 elementary schools.
When voters in NISD passed a $992 million school bond in 2022, the district accessed funds for major facelifts, including HVAC replacements, classroom replacements and updated offices, gyms and cafeteria spaces.
The district is halfway done with its long list of projects, including the completion of a brand new $24.5 million sports complex near Sotomayor High School on the far Northwest Side.
Several other projects are still underway, and the school board weighs in on the bond process at several points throughout the year, including green lighting new contracts, naming new facilities or giving stamps of approval once a project is done.
But bond projects at nine elementary schools, located mostly on the West Side, have been paused because of low enrollment, NISD officials said.
 


-- Xochilt Garcia
National $500K Future-Ready Facilities Grant Launches to Help Modernize School Infrastructure Across the U.S
-- Morningstar National: April 06, 2026 [ abstract]

VIENNA, Va., April 1, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Attune today announced the launch of a new national initiative, the Future-Ready Facilities Grant, a cohort program selecting 25 school districts to implement indoor air quality (IAQ), energy, and water monitoring technologies and reporting practices that help districts measure building performance, prioritize maintenance and capital planning, and transparently communicate progress.
The program provides $500,000 total in support across the cohort. Applications open April 1, 2026 and close May 15, 2026. Evaluations will be completed by May 31, winners selected June 1, and announced June 15.
The initiative is designed to address a growing challenge across the U.S.: aging school facilities that lack visibility into critical building performance metrics.
 


-- PR Newswire
Portland proposes $109M school renovation plan; voters to decide in May referendum
-- The Middletown Press Connecticut: April 05, 2026 [ abstract]

PORTLAND — Portland Public Schools and town officials are advancing a major plan that would renovate and expand multiple schools across the district, aiming to address aging facilities through significant upgrades.
First Selectman Michael Pelton said the town held a referendum two years ago to close two elementary schools and consolidate into one, but voters rejected the proposal.
He said residents were concerned about the future of Brownstone Intermediate School, a historic building, and pushed back against the idea of a single large elementary school.
 


-- Crystal Elescano
Maine bill to help cities and town turn old schools into housing advances
-- Spectrum News Maine: April 03, 2026 [ abstract]

AUGUSTA — The Maine House on Thursday advanced a bill to help local cities and towns repurpose old schools into housing.

Across the state, 24 former schools have been identified as potential sites for housing redevelopment, Rep. Traci Gere (D-Kennebunkport) said during debate in the House. 

“Converting vacant schools into housing is a commonsense approach to creating affordable and attainable housing and this bill will help provide housing that is desperately needed,” she said.

As amended, the bill, LD 2164 allocates $5 million a year to the Maine Redevelopment Land Bank Authority for the creation of a new Maine School Conversion Fund program. 

Speaking in opposition, Rep. Amanda Collamore (R-Pittsfield), said the authority is relatively new and not well positioned to administer another program. Also, she said $5 million a year likely won’t come near to covering the costs of a school renovation, particularly given the need to address asbestos and groundwater issues.

“It’s probably only going to support one school building instead of multiple,” she said. 


-- Susan Cover
WAPS receives $5.5M tax credit for geothermal projects
-- Winona Area Public Schools Minnesota: April 03, 2026 [ abstract]

Geothermal dehumidification systems have already injected new life into two historic Winona Area Public Schools elementary schools. 

Now, a federal tax credit tied to those projects will open the door for the possibilities of additional improvements to the educational environment for Winona area students, staff and community members. 

Superintendent Brad Berzinski on Thursday night shared with the school board that the district has received a check for $5.5 million, the culmination of two years of work to apply for a federal tax credit available to entities that meet certain criteria for energy efficiency projects.

“I am grateful,” school board chair Nancy Denzer said. “I am excited about what this means and appreciative of all the people who spent so much time on this.”


-- Staff Writer
City Schools Advances Solar Power Purchase Agreement for Charlottesville High School
-- City of Charlottesville Virginia: April 03, 2026 [ abstract]

Charlottesville City Schools (CCS) and the City of Charlottesville (City) are pleased to announce the successful execution of a major Solar Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) that will significantly advance community sustainability goals while delivering long-term financial benefits. A PPA is an arrangement in which a third-party developer installs, owns, and operates an energy system (e.g., solar) on a customer’s property. The customer purchases the system’s electric output for a predetermined period. 

Under this new agreement, a 1.318 MWdc size solar energy system will be installed at Charlottesville High School (CHS). Once operational, the system is expected to generate approximately 1,738,000 kilowatt-hours of renewable energy each year. This production will offset an estimated 59% of CHS’s total annual electricity use.

Over the 25-year term of the PPA, the project is forecast to achieve approximately $2.3 million in avoided electricity costs. The environmental benefits are equally significant. The project will avoid more than 40,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions, which is equivalent to removing roughly 8,400 gas-powered cars from the road for an entire year. This initiative represents a substantial contribution toward the City’s long-term climate and sustainability goals.


-- Kristel Riddervold
Northampton council signs off on $132.3M, five-year capital plan
-- Daily Hampshire Gazette Massachusetts: April 02, 2026 [ abstract]

NORTHAMPTON — The City Council this week approved a new five-year Capital Improvement Plan for funding infrastructure projects across the city, with much of the debate at Tuesday’s meeting focused on specific, immediate projects such as repairs to City Hall’s roof and various school district initiatives. 

The Capital Improvement Plan, or CIP, includes plans for projects spanning from 2027-2031 — a total of about $132.3 million in projected spending across all departments over that time period. 

Much of the focus at a public hearing on March 19 and at Tuesday’s meeting was on the first year of the plan, in fiscal 2027.


-- Anthony Cammalleri
Storm shelter at new Wylie ISD campus to enhance student safety
-- Big Country Home Page Texas: April 01, 2026 [ abstract]

ABILENE  – Students at Wylie East Junior High moved from one classroom to another on Wednesday morning as part of a shelter-in-place drill.

The class they left had an exterior-facing wall, while the room they relocated to was an interior space, offering more protection. Students then remained in the interior classroom for the remainder of the drill.

However, for some students in the Wylie Independent School District, these drills will look different in the upcoming school year.

Wylie South Elementary School’s gymnasium will also act as a storm shelter in the case of severe weather when the school opens this fall. The shelter will be surrounded by 16 inches of concrete and will have its own power and water sources, separate from the rest of the building.


-- Areebah Bharmal
Its schools are falling apart, and voters won’t pass a bond. Could a little-used tactic help this district?
-- The San Diego Union-Tribune California: March 29, 2026 [ abstract]

Johnny Heredia expects to spend an upcoming summer digging up pipes at Chase Avenue Elementary School.

As director of facilities, maintenance and operations for Cajon Valley Union School District, he’s the one called when sewage backs up into bathrooms or playgrounds. It happens often.

Digging up the pipes, he acknowledges, would destroy the floors and sidewalks. But those need to be replaced anyway. While he’s at it, he could finally bring the bathrooms into compliance with disabilities law and maybe replace the floors’ terrazzo — it’s expensive, he acknowledges, but it lasts forever.

“You’ve ruined the sidewalks, destroyed the sprinkler system and the grass — and then you start to get into structural issues, as you’re saw-cutting into other things just to replace the sewer system,” he said. “Even though the sewer system’s $1 million, you’ve done $2 million worth of damage.”

If the East County school district could pass a bond, it could address some of these issues at its aging schools. But voters haven’t passed a facilities bond in nearly two decades, and since then, the district’s maintenance budget hasn’t been able to keep up with the needed repairs.


-- Jemma Stephenson
San José School District Moves to Close 5 Elementary Schools
-- KQED California: March 27, 2026 [ abstract]


San José’s school district will shutter five elementary schools and relocate another at the end of the year, despite pleas from parents and community members to halt the closure process.
The school board voted three to two late Thursday night in favor of the consolidation plan, which will close Empire Gardens, Lowell, Gardner, Canoas and Terrell elementary schools and relocate Hammer Montessori to the Gardner campus at the end of the year.
School Board Vice President Brian Wheatley and trustee Nicole Gribstad voted against the plan.
“It would not be honest to suggest that a recommendation like this comes without loss. There is grief and change, especially when it touches schools and neighborhoods that people love,” Superintendent Nancy Albarrán said. “But there is also hope … the goal of this work is to create stronger, more stable, more resource school communities for students now and into the future.”
SJUSD staff said it would alert families who will be affected by the closures on Friday and finalize students’ new school assignments by May 1.
The closures come as districts across the Bay Area combat significant enrollment declines. San José Unified School District’s student population has shrunk 20% — a total of 6,000 students — since 2017.
 


-- Katie DeBenedetti
Southington PZC Backs Bonding For Massive School Building Project
-- Patch Connecticut: March 27, 2026 [ abstract]


 The Southington Planning and Zoning Commission unanimously endorsed a key step in advancing a proposed $86.7 million school facilities bond, sending a positive recommendation to the Southington Town Council following a March 17 meeting.
The commission reviewed a mandatory 8-24 referral for a bond ordinance that would fund projects under the town’s Elementary Facilities Plan.
The proposal includes the construction of a new Kelley Elementary School, renovations at South End Elementary School, and the eventual closure of Flanders Elementary School, with its building repurposed for municipal and community use.
PZC member Todd Chaplinsky cited the town’s 2016 Plan of Conservation and Development (POCD) in support of the proposal, reading language that anticipates long-term planning for school facilities and the possibility of consolidation if enrollment declines.
“The Plan of Conservation and Development does not get involved in day-to-day operations of individual departments,” Chaplinsky said, quoting the document. “Rather, the plan seeks to identify potential community facility needs such as buildings and sites so that they can be anticipated and planned for.”
 


-- Michael Lemanski
Fairfax County schools consider selling naming rights to fix $400M repair crisis
-- Fox 5 Virginia: March 27, 2026 [ abstract]

 Fairfax County school leaders are exploring a bold, business-style strategy to tackle a growing infrastructure problem: selling naming rights to school facilities.
Facing a staggering $400 million maintenance backlog, Fairfax County Public Schools may allow companies to sponsor stadiums, gyms, and other athletic facilities — similar to naming deals in professional sports. 
The goal is to generate new revenue without raising taxes. 


-- Julie Donaldson
Arizona must fix school facilities funding system, judge rules; Crane weighs in
-- KAWC.org Arizona: March 26, 2026 [ abstract]

An Arizona judge has ordered the state to fix its school facilities funding system, a decision that Crane School District says reinforces the state’s responsibility to adequately fund schools.

The ruling, issued March 4, gives lawmakers eight months to create a constitutional funding system. It’s the result of a 2017 lawsuit brought forward by four plaintiff districts, including Crane.

Last August, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Dewain Fox initially determined the state of Arizona was inadequately providing for its public schools.

The Arizona Constitution requires the state to establish and maintain a “general and uniform public school system.” In Glendale Elementary School District v. State of Arizona, plaintiffs successfully argued that the state’s capital funding model creates a divide between schools able to meet basic needs through stronger local tax bases and those that cannot.

Following months of back-and-forth over the form of the ruling, Fox finalized his order with a permanent injunction requiring the state to fix its capital funding system for school buildings and facilities.


-- Sisko J. Stargazer
Safety mapping for Iowa schools continues, but districts must now foot the bill
-- WQAD8 Iowa: March 26, 2026 [ abstract]


BETTENDORF, Iowa — Iowa school districts now must decide whether to pay for digital building maps on their own after the state ended funding for a school safety program launched under Gov. Kim Reynolds’ 2022 School Safety Initiative. 
The program, known as Critical Incident Mapping, provides detailed indoor maps to help first responders navigate schools during emergencies.
TJ Kennedy, president and CEO of GeoComm, the company that partnered with the Iowa Department of Education to implement the program, said the mapping system has been deployed in more than 1,400 schools statewide, covering over 545,000 students.
The maps allow school officials to see the location of 911 calls in real time and help identify evacuation routes and safe areas during severe weather or active shooter incidents. 
 


-- Shelby Kluver
North Country school districts ask Albany for help as energy bills soar
-- WWNYT.com New York: March 26, 2026 [ abstract]


School districts across the North Country are asking for help from Albany as energy costs surge, warning that residents could see a tax hike if relief doesn’t come.
LaFargeville Superintendent Travis Hoover said the district’s utility bill jumped from $12,000 in January to $26,000 in February, an increase of $14,000 in one month.
“We’ve already expended what we budgeted for this year for electricity, and we know that’s going to keep going so we’re going to be pulling it out of reserves to make sure those costs are met,” Hoover said.
LaFargeville is not the only district seeing higher energy costs.
Sackets Harbor Central School District said its energy bill in January was $19,000, up from $11,000 last January, while only using 8% more energy.
16 districts call for state action
In an effort to find a solution, superintendents from 16 North Country districts wrote a letter to Albany calling for change.
Sackets Harbor Superintendent Jennifer Gaffney helped write the letter calling for energy price regulation, establishing or enhancing assistance programs, and creating an emergency fund for schools struggling with energy costs.
“That is to be shared with our elected officials for the purpose of advocating for an approach to assist public schools to ensure that we are not diverting resources from children to pay our electric bill,” Gaffney said.
 


-- Seth Appleby
Olmsted Falls School District eyes $87 million plan to replace, renovate buildings
-- Cleveland.com Ohio: March 25, 2026 [ abstract]


Because of its aging infrastructure, the Olmsted Falls City School District started a facilities master plan effort more than two years ago that recently culminated in recommendations from a volunteer committee.
The proposal comes with a roughly $87 million price tag.
“The group ultimately decided to make a recommendation to do a combined condense, renovate and replace,” said Olmsted Falls City Schools Director of Business Heath Krakowiak.
He chaired the district’s 40-member volunteer facilities master planning committee.
“That would involve condensing our PreK, K(indergarten) and grades 1-3 facilities, which is the Early Childhood Center and Falls-Lenox Primary School, and creating a new building space,” he said.
“Also, renovating our middle school and high school with needs such as HVAC, electrical and safety.”
 


-- John Benson
Ask the Electrician: When is the best time for educational facilities to plan for summer maintenance?
-- NEREJ.com National: March 25, 2026 [ abstract]

In the world of institutional management, the calendar is deceptive. We talk about summer maintenance, but from an electrical perspective, the most critical work happens while the snow is still melting. The months of March and April are the best strategic window for your facility to plan for the summer. The difference between a chaotic July and a productive one comes down to the decisions you make now.

While summer is still the best time for major electrical work because buildings are less occupied, the complexity of modern campus systems has increased. Between the integration of EV charging stations, sophisticated HVAC controls, and high-density classroom technology, you don’t want to take a costly ‘wait until it breaks’ approach to maintenance.

In this Ask The Electrician column, we’ll cover what electrical maintenance tasks schools and institutions should prioritize as the 2026 summer shutdown approaches.


-- Edward Gould
Medford Comprehensive High School Building Committee presents new educational plan to city
-- The Tufts Daily Massachusetts: March 24, 2026 [ abstract]


At their March 23 meeting, the Medford Comprehensive High School Building Committee voted on six final designs for the high school.
Whittling the potential designs down from 29, committee members discussed design priorities ranging from site safety and security to ensuring strong counseling and community health support. Members also debated how a new pool might be included in the construction and fielded public questions and comments.
The construction plan for Medford’s new high school is in full swing following the presentation of its educational plan in January. Written by the Medford Comprehensive High School Building Committee, the plan envisions improved learning spaces and programming for students, faculty and community members.
Guided by Medford Public Schools Superintendent Suzanne Galusi and Kimberly Talbot, assistant superintendent of academics and instruction, the 58-page plan includes architectural proposals for potential classroom and learning space dimensions as well as educational goals that center on creating “human-centered spaces that support collaboration, movement and multiple modes of teaching and learning,” which are currently lacking in Medford’s high school, according to Talbot.
“The classrooms are small,” Talbot said. “There’s not space for you to get up and move into this small group. … It’s not a respectful professional space for kids to work.”
 


-- Owen Chin-Rust and Evan Vezmar