School board ponders future of old Stanford schoolhouse

PINE PLAINS — A meeting will be scheduled to look into the future of the Attlebury Schoolhouse in the town of Stanford, it was decided at the last Pine Plains Board of Education (BOE) meeting, held Sept. 23.

At the Sept. 9 board meeting, members of the Stanford Historical Society  expressed their interest in making needed repairs to the deteriorating building and maintaining it going into the future.

“We were alarmed at the condition of the building,� historical society President Jim Shockley told the board at that meeting. Shockley inquired if the district had any plans for the building. He also said the society was interested in beginning restoration on the schoolhouse, which was built in 1910.

The building was used, up until the turn of the century, for educational field trips. Since then, the building has fallen into disrepair. Shockley distributed pictures and explained that the cedar shingles in the roof are leaking and the foundation is “crumbling� on the west side of the building.

In the best case scenario, Shockley said, the historical society would like ownership of the schoolhouse, which he said is the last of its kind in the town of Stanford.

“We can’t afford to see it rot,� he said. “We believe it needs to stay where it is and be repaired.�

While board members agreed that the historical society would be the best entity to have ownership of the building, the transfer of ownership is a matter of legality that has yet to be resolved.

As district Superintendent Linda Kaumeyer explained at the Sept. 9 meeting, the state education department has certain requirements for school property. Voter approval would be required if the school district decides to donate the building to the historical society.

Whatever the process, it would take time, the board explained. Shockley asked if the board could give the society permission to hire a contractor to do immediate repairs to the roof, before it suffered through another winter. Again, the request was a question of legality and state procedure, Kaumeyer said.

At the Sept. 23 meeting the board requested that a meeting be scheduled among the owners of the land the building lies on, the Stanford Historical Society, the school district and two representatives from the Board of Education (John Shea and Bruce Kimball). The date of the meeting has not yet been determined. Currently the permitted options for the district are to sell, give away as a gift or lease the building.

The Board of Education met Wednesday, Oct. 7, at 7 p.m. at Seymour Smith Elementary after this paper’s deadline.

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