BOE building committee recommends closing Batcheller

WINSTED — After three months of discussion, the town’s School Building Committee voted unanimously to recommend to the Board of Education the closing of Batcheller School during its meeting on Thursday, March 17.The committee cited the cost of bringing Batcheller up to code as well as the presence of asbestos as reasons for recommending to close the building.The Board of Education has decided to move the seventh- and eighth-graders to The Gilbert School, the town’s semi-private high school. The town no longer needs three buildings to hold the elementary school students.For the past three months, members of the building committee have discussed extensively the pros and cons of the Batchellor, Hinsdale and Pearson buildings.They have also toured each facility and reviewed evaluations conducted by O’Riordan Migani Architects of Seymour.In their report, the architects estimate it would cost $4,557,709 to bring Batcheller School to current building and fire codes.The building’s needs include a new staircase and ramp at the main entrance, making student lavatories on the upper level handicapped accessible, upgrading the school’s existing elevator to meet current codes and standards and replacing the existing flammable sugar cane fiber ceiling tile with gypsum acoustical tile.School Building Committee Chairman Joseph Beadle said while the school’s building structure concerns is one factor in the committee’s recommendation, another factor is an asbestos management plan report issued in October by Mystic Air Quality Consultants of Groton.According to the report, which was issued last October, materials containing asbestos can be found throughout the school, including in its sheet rock, wallboard, fire door insulation, cove base molding and mastic, window caulking and glazing.It also lists 10,000 square feet of asbestos in glue daubs above ceiling tile, 2,200 square feet of carpet over “suspect materials” throughout the school building and an unknown amount of asbestos above all acoustical ceilings.The Board of Education is expected to take up the recommendation at one of its next meetings.

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