Showing posts with label Page Middle School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Page Middle School. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

The Waterline At Page Middle School: Disaster Waiting To Happen Here Too?

The new 16” waterline extending along T.C. Walker Road and installed as part of constructing Page Middle School, does not seem to have been installed in the proper location. Apparently when VDOT required changes to design drawings for improvements of the T.C. Walker Road and Route 17 intersection, those changes were not incorporated into the civil site and utility drawings. This failure has resulted in the 16” waterline now being located in the very bottom of the VDOT drainage ditch.
As the story goes; the contractor installed the waterline and then began constructing the drainage ditch. As they constructed the ditch they discovered they removed most of the dirt above the waterline. Instead of removing the waterline and reinstalling it in the correct location when the error was discovered, they excavated along side of and under the waterline, removing the stone bedding and dirt from under the pipe while it was still put together. 

Once the stone and dirt are removed from under the waterline it will sag downward. The more it is forced to sag, the more each connection joint in the line separates. This is a dangerous and unacceptable method of lowering a waterline that operates under pressure. The reliability of the gaskets used to seal each joint and the chances of every joint being completely home (fitted all the way together) become compromised when manipulated in such a manner. 

The required stone bedding under the pipe is also compromised and often completely ignored when utilizing such method. Another reason to avoid such method of adjusting waterline depth is it rarely results in achieving the required depth. A significant section of the new waterline does not come close to having the required amount of cover. On August 20, 2015 I used a four foot long probe rod to determine the amount of cover over the waterline and discovered areas with less than two feet of cover. The minimum cover requirement is generally three feet. The main reasons for minimum cover requirements are to protect the waterline from freezing and to limit pipe movement, thus preventing the pipe from blowing apart under pressure. The close proximity of the waterline to the water tower that supplies it, the fact that the pipe dead ends so close to the incorrectly covered pipe and that flow through the pipe will basically cease daily during each day’s coldest periods, during weekends and during other times the school is closed during winter months, are all very good reasons for not accepting the waterline in it’s current condition. The waterline in its current condition will also increase the chance of VDOT damaging it during ditch maintenance.

 If VDOT should damage the line, they will be exempt from responsibility as prescribed by the Code of Virginia and all liability will fall on Gloucester taxpayers. If, for any reason, the waterline blows apart so close to the water tower supplying it, the results would be catastrophic; most likely resulting in a significant portion of T.C. Walker Road and the entrance to Page being washed away before the water could be turned off. Page would be closed until water could be restored and the road and entrance repaired. In this scenario Gloucester taxpayers will also assume liability.
I know everyone wants the new school opened as currently scheduled, but this serious issue should not be ignored or dismissed for the sake of opening on time. It should also not be dismissed to save a buck, no matter whose buck it is.
Respectfully and just my 2 cents worth,
Kenneth E. Hogge, Sr.



The two above pictures shows where we were out measuring where and how deep the waterline is buried by Page Middle School.  

Mr. Hogge,


Schools and the Contractor are very well aware of the waterline issue and have committed to making the needed repairs during the Winter Break in December. Not only has the Contractor’s President issued a guarantee to the County for the repair, but we also continue to hold a performance bond on the Contractor to ensure the repairs are made to satisfaction. Public Utilities is aware of the Contractors commitment and finds the repair strategy to be acceptable.

Thank you for your support. Have a nice day.





John E.Hutchinson


Sunday, September 6, 2015

Page Middle School, Serious Life Threatening Concerns To Consider



















Above is a close up picture of the fence at the back or front of the building where the buses will be dropping off children at the new Page Middle School.  Children are going to want to play on and try to climb these fences.  With the top the way it is, we can see some serious issues coming up where some of the children will potentially get hurt.  Well, you can say, keep the children off the fences and make it a penalty for playing on them.  That's what any good person would think who never had children.  Children are going to be children.  Any penalty here should go against the school, not the children for such a poor design.  This is the very least of the issues we have seen at the new school.


Here is a scene when you go through what most would consider the front of the school, not where buses will be dropping off the children.  The staircase is okay, but look at the top of the stairs.  That is a wide open floor plan between the first floor and the second floor and it is very extensive.  The rail to protect the children is only 3 feet high.  Nothing else to protect anyone from anything.

  Now again, children are going to be children.  Lets see what we can expect with this type of open floor plan.  From the second floor, Johnny is going to want to see his new paper airplane can really fly.  Jimmy will want to see if he can hit Bobbie on the first floor with a piece of balled up paper from the second floor.    Oh and this is just the potential for mild mischief.  Now Madison and Billy do not get along, so while walking down this corridor, Madison comes up behind Billy and takes his bookbag and tosses if off the second floor where it accidently hits little Alison in the head forcing her head into the wall where she is knocked out and has to go to the hospital.  (Pray something like this never happens.)

  Or two children get into a fight by the rails and one or both go over.  Will any of them survive?  In my own opinion, this is a premeditated design disaster.

Wait, it gets worse.


Now take a look at these lockers.  The top of the lockers are at an even match for the top of the rails.  Anyone envisioning a child standing on top of the lockers and playing around?  Way to close to the edge of a very long fall.


This is the view of what is below.  Open education?



Here are some better views of the open corridor from the second floor where the middle school children will be walking everyday.

I walked through this school with an engineer who was mortified by what he saw.  A question that has been brought to my attention is how did the school board manage to get a certificate of occupancy especially when there are no visible escape routes and or facilities for handicapped children that might be on the second floor?  None.  Only item seen was one elevator which during a fire, can not be used according to what we know of fire codes.





If a fire should engulf the front of the building, the children will be locked in an outdoor courtyard that is fully fenced in with locked gates trapping them from being able to get out to safety.  Who designs these buildings?


At least the folks of the school board did think of one escape route that doubles as a king of the hill playground.  That massive dirt pile there might just be the escape route when the area floods.  You know those rising sea levels are unpredictable.  (HEHEHEHEE!)


Now someone from the School Board managed to get channel 13 out to cover the open house day at Page.  I wonder if anyone from the news crew noticed any of these issues?  Did they report on any of the potential issues for the incoming students?  No?  



Now I will give it that the new gym looks pretty nice but lacks bleachers for games against other schools or is competition dead?  My question is who are these workout machines for?  Please do not tell me these are for the children.  Their muscles are not ready for hard core training like this from what I understand.  This is even to high end for high school.  So is this for the teachers at taxpayer expense?  





Other issues well noted was the tremendous waste of space everywhere throughout the building.  Poor planning.  With all the wasted space and all the open areas up through the second floor, that also creates massive heating and cooling issues that is not really a big deal since its the taxpayers who are paying for it all anyway.  Ya gotta love that.  You are stuck with the bills for someone else's carelessness in design and others who approved that carelessness.  Or was it carelessness?  Nah, they just know its your money they are spending so it does not mean anything to them.

Approved by your local school board and probably the state Board of Education.  The same people in charge of our children's education and our future.  Oh, now that is just embarrassing. 

https://goo.gl/photos/8reFUmCLkGSnjw5a6  You can see more photos of the school at this link.

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Gloucester Schools Want More Funding For Page Middle School


Here we go.  This point has already been put up before the Board of Supervisors already and the Board pretty much said no.  So what do the propagandists do?  They start the media campaign in an effort to publicly  embarrass the Board of Supervisors in an expectation that the School Board will get its way.

  This is not a new trick.  Its a very old trick and it works very well.  Especially when you can get any area of the media to run the story such as channel 13 news.  The school board is bloated with way too many administrative staff and spent a fortune on a refurbishing an entire school building for themselves all at the same time knowing that they had to fund Page.  But hey, its your money so who cares how much they spend?

  We have a solution to all of this.  Raise the tax rates on every registered democrat in Gloucester County by 3 times the present rate.  For the democrats hiding in the republican party raise their rates by the same amount.  Raise the rates on the socialists by 10 times the present amount.  They are free to complain but no one will care.  Anyone else who just feels bad about it all can pony up and donate all the money they want until it hurts.  Get another mortgage on your house and donate that money to the school board so they can continue their bloat at your expense.  This should allow them to add all new levels of bloat as well.

  We told everyone years ago before construction even started this would happen.  Yes we are saying we told you so.  What is even worse?  None of these folks feel the least bit bad about this crap.  In fact if you want to talk to any of them they will be more than happy to justify their claim and talk you out of more of your money.  Make it simple, just hand them all the money in your pocket before you even start to think about speaking to any of them.



One last thought.  If the school board can not afford to open this school they can always turn it into a homeless shelter that the area desperately needs anyway.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Continued Corruption in Gloucester County, Virginia

Gloucester CountyVirginia’s track record of not having many persons interested in serving on the School Board continues to make it easy for the Gloucester County Public School System to be used as a tool to fulfill the interests of a select few with little regard to the effect on the education process.  The Gloucester County School Board has a newly elected member who turns out to be a developer who is involved in the creation of a mixed use development (MUD) at the intersection of T.C. Walker Road and Route 17.  It is about 400 acres of property that is mostly farm fields next to the old Page Middle School and current bus garage property.

  Examples of MUD are New Town and High Street in Williamsburg and City Center in Newport News.  The concept of a MUD like these is to provide a place for people to live, work and play. Successful MUDs are supported by people intense hubs like colleges, universities, high volume tourism, multiple large commercial or industrial businesses, etc.  In essence, the hub of a successful MUD is something that establishes and maintains a constant high volume of people. Gloucester County does not possess such a hub.
 
According to tax records and School Board meeting minutes; one day prior to the School Board’s December 13, 2011 vote to rebuild Page Middle School on property known as Tax Map #39-198, Harry Corr purchased all Route 17 road frontage property that connects to the new Page property.  These parcels of land are known as Tax Map #39-198A, Tax Map #39-198B and Tax Map # 39-199.  Tax records reflect that Mr. Corr purchased the three properties for $630,000 which is more than six times the current assessed value.  The value of the property Mr. Corr purchased will substantially increase and the cost to develop it will greatly decrease as a result of improvements to the Route 17 and T.C. Walker intersection and the extension of public water service to that side of Route 17.  These improvements and extensions are part of the Page project and are funded by GCPS and VDOT. (TAX DOLLARS)  This should be raising alarm bells because it appears Mr. Corr possessed insider or advance knowledge of what the outcome of the School Board’s vote was going to be.
 
Mr. Corr also owns and controls about 400 acres of land that is fronted by Route 17, connects to the old Page Middle School land and connecting Gloucester Public School’s transportation complex, connects to Hickory Fork Road and will greatly benefit from the signalization of the T.C. Walker Road and Route 17 intersection.  This is the property that Douglas S. Meredith, Director of the Gloucester Economic Development Authority pointed out as the location of a currently conceived MUD during his presentation to the Board of Supervisors on March 18, 2014. Mr. Meredith also shared that Charles Records was the developer and elaborated on the value of the old Page and bus complex properties to the MUD.  He also shared that various surveys have been done on Mr. Corr’s property and provided general information on the results.
 
Charles Records ran uncontested and was elected to the School Board in November 2013.  The same Charles Records who continually asserts how valuable the old Page and bus complex properties are and is a staunch supporter of selling it.  Selling it would mean building a new bus complex at a different location and tearing down the existing and usable buildings. So far this MUD has consumed what would have been a 30 plus million dollar school complex that would have cost the tax payers 10 million dollars.  All that had to be done was follow the insurance company recommendations after the 2011 tornado.  Now Gloucester County tax payers are not only faced with a 20 million dollar lose but also 20 million dollars in unnecessary debt to build the new Page Middle School.  
 
How much more money are the tax payers of Gloucester County supposed to watch get burned up in Harry Corr’s, Charles Records’ and a select few others’ trash barrel.  What do almost all of the residents of Gloucester get out of what Harry Corr, Charles Records and a few others are doing? Nothing.  Nothing at all.  They just get to watch millions of their tax dollars go towards making a very small number of people rich.  They get to pay unnecessary taxes and fees.  They get to watch their public education system degrade.  They get to watch valuable infrastructure fall apart.  They get to watch and absorb excessive and unnecessary borrowing.  They get to continue to distrust those responsible for operating the County and Public School System.
 
The high level of corruption that exists within the Gloucester County Public Education System is crystal clear and Charles Records appears to be a willing participant in that corruption and should resign his position on the Gloucester County School Board immediately.
 
Submitted by:
“Watching Them In Plain Sight”
 
“Watching Them In Plain Sight” is a non-political citizen based group focusing on identifying and exposing local government corruption, waste and misuse.  We encourage anyone with knowledge of corruption, waste or misuse within Gloucester County’s government or the Gloucester County Public School System to contact us at WatchingThemInPlainSight@gmail.com.  Your identity will not be publicly disclosed without your written permission. 
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Thursday, December 12, 2013

Gloucester, VA Old Page Middle School Site, What Should We Do With It?

There are a lot of questions being asked about what we should do with the old Page Middle School site.  Ideas have ranged from yet another community park to a community recreation center, a place to institute a new multi garage and repair center for the county and school board vehicles to selling the property to a commercial developer.

  Here is something to consider, it's got plenty of land and space for building what the county could really use.  A living museum.  Yes, we already have a museum.  A very tiny one.  Not a living one.  The county is always looking for ways to promote tourism and trying to figure out how to get more of the tourist dollars that go to other areas such as Jamestown, Yorktown and of course the big one, Williamsburg.  Those are areas with very rich histories.

  Looking at the entire scope of history however, Gloucester ranks right up there with these other locations.  Our history is no less remarkable and we just do not take advantage of it the way we should.  In the past, because of it's location, Gloucester was not a solid contender for being added to the list of joining Jamestown and Yorktown in crafting plans for promoting history and tourism.  Gloucester lacked a solid way to come into the county.  Today that simply isn't the case with a 4 lane bridge connecting us to those major centers.

  Gloucester lacks promotions of Pocahontas, Powhatan, Tobacco plantations, indentured servant uprisings, Bacon's rebellion, Battle of the Hook, Rosewell, Walter Reed birthplace and the first shots fired in Virginia during the American Civil War and the list is much larger than this.  Gloucester history is American History and we sit on it doing very little to promote and take advantage of it.

  Look across the river and watch as Yorktown continues to grow along with the new major museum being built there.  A well planned living museum could do massive  wonders for this community.  Gloucester does not lack historians with an incredible knowledge of this area's history by any means.  Warren Deal and the entire team that put together the Battle of the Hook event back in October did one of the most spectacular jobs anyone could ever begin to imagine.  The educational value would also be a incredible blessing.  We would happily donate all we could to the concept.  If Gloucester is to grow into the future, our leaders need to start looking at what is needed to make that happen in a well structured way that will benefit the community.  Are we to just sit on our history and let it rot never to take advantage of its opportunities?

  If we wait for some company to come in and take advantage of our history, well we have already been doing that and it has gotten us nowhere.  It's time to be proactive.  A new and properly planned living museum could bring in some very much needed tourist dollars and also enhance area education.  It's a win win situation.  In fact, it's Revolutionary.





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Thursday, October 31, 2013

Page Middle School; Wrongful use of Public Body?

Questions To Ask Board Members:

Mr. Hutson and Mr. Andersen:
 
As a constituent of the district you represent in Gloucester County; I respectfully ask you to read what is written below and answer the following question:
 
What will be done to address the unethical and unlawful use of Gloucester's Public School System and it's elected Public Body?

Sometime in May or June 2011 the Gloucester School Board, and the Gloucester Public Schools Superintendent Benjamin Kiser began publicly disregarding input from Gloucester’s residents and the Gloucester Board of Supervisors on matters pertaining to the rebuilding of Page Middle School which was damaged by a tornado on April 16, 2011.  School Board and Board of Supervisor meeting videos and minutes pertaining to Page Middle School reconstruction clearly document the level of disregard, as do circumstances and conversations that I have uncovered during my research.  It appears that what began as a community disaster quickly turned into the means for the School Board, Mr. Kiser and others to assist certain land developers in having Gloucester tax payers and VDOT pay for several million dollars worth of infrastructure.  Many Gloucester residents believe numerous improprieties and violations of law have occurred throughout the Page Middle School rebuilding process.
 
County records obtained under the Freedom of Information Act reflect that the Page Middle School building, its contents and property in the open were insured for a total of $13,513,744 at the time of the April 2011 tornado. (Attachment )  Belfor USA Group was contracted almost immediately after the tornado to commence recovery and cleanup services at Page.  The Group was paid more than $624,000 for services provided.  Services included testing for lead paint, asbestos and other toxins.  It also included clean-up of debris and placement of security measures including fencing.  Of the $624,000, $51,303 was paid out for roof patching and other work to preserve the less damaged portions of Page.  $62,600 was paid out to remove exposed asbestos.  $4,000 was paid out to demolish selected areas of the building.  At the end of the insurance negotiation process, the insurance carrier’s settlement offer to fund returning the school to an upgraded and functional state and to repair all outbuildings, lights, fences, the concession stand and bleachers was $8,235,687. (Attachment )  Due to claims of initial low offers by the insurance carrier which are dated July 6, 2011 and July 14, 2011, Mr. Kiser instructed RRMM Architects to provide another assessment of the damage. In RRMM’s assessment and analysis packet dated August 4, 2011, they elaborate on their solid knowledge of the building and its general character due to an April 2009 contract with the County to do a study on conversion of Page Middle school into an Administrative Operations Center(Attachment ) This professional services contract was extended about a month prior to the tornado.  This makes it clearly evident of the County’s intent to keep the building and property long term.  In their assessment RRMM noted several areas in which they disagreed with the insurance carrier’s assessment.  In all fairness to RRMM, the areas they disagreed with appear to be justified and would have enhanced the safety, quality and durability of the building significantly.  RRMM’s final estimate of damages was $9,994,355.  That is a difference of $1,758,668 with both estimates being well under the $13,513,744 coverage limit.  Because of age it is only reasonable that the utility infrastructure servicing the building would have needed to be upgraded or replaced.  These costs would in no way have been as great as what it will now cost to install the same type of infrastructure to the newly developed Page site on T.C. Walker Road.  The parking and driveway areas would have needed to be upgraded to compliment the rest of the re-construction. According to recorded minutes of the November 9, 2011 School Board meeting, Mr. Kiser stated it would cost around 2.2 million dollars to build school administration offices on the Page site.  Let’s say RRMM’s estimate turned out to be the correct cost.  Let’s say the County contributed another $10,000,000 to upgrade the utilities, parking and drive areas and to construct the administration facility.  That would have been a total of $11,758,668 the County would have contributed to opening a fully functional middle school and administration center.  Costs to date reported by the public school system are in the neighborhood of 29 million dollars.  The expected recovery time started at 18 months to 2 years and is now expected to be four years and five months.  There is also an expected one million dollar shortfall for furnishings and technology.  6.4 million dollars of the proceeds for construction are from the sale of Qualified School Construction Bonds which entitle the County to a direct federal subsidy to offset 100% of the interest payments on this loan.  12 million dollars is a loan with interest from the sale of Bonds through the Virginia Public School Authority.  These two loans will cost the tax payers over 20 million dollars. 
 
The acreage of the original Page school site is in excess of the Virginia Department of Education guidelines of ten acres for a middle school complex and contained actively used sports fields with fences, lighting, seating, concession stand and parking.  The lighting, seating and concession stand were removed from the property, but the fields are still actively being used thru utilizing a portable concession stand and portable lighting systems. The School Board ultimately voted to rebuild Page Middle School on Gloucester County owned property that is located across Route 17 from the Page site and about three tenths of a mile down T.C. Walker Road.(Attachment )
 
 
As part of the recovery process, Mr. Kiser formed an Ad Hoc Committee to seek long term solutions for Page Middle School.  No evidence has been made available that demonstrates the committee was provided with the actual assessments of damage to Page.  A FOIA request for Committee meeting minutes resulted in a reply from ---- Diane Gamache which states: “Please be advised that while I have requested minutes (that neither Dr. Kiser nor I possess) from RRMM.  I have yet to hear from them on this matter.  I am uncertain if they retained such meeting notes once the proposals/recommendations had been accepted/agreed upon by the members of the Committee and then presented to both the School Board and the Board of Supervisors.  As soon as I hear from RRMM I will notify you.”  The third point of RRMM’s fee estimate to facilitate the Ad Hoc committee dated June 30, 2011 states: “RRMM will generally steer and lead the committee meetings, take meeting minutes, provide graphics and other materials necessary for the facilitation and bind the conclusions into a hard copy that can be reproduced and distributed at the discretion of GCPS.”  Virginia law allows study committees to meet without a requirement to take minutes, however RRMM explicitly stated they would take minutes.  These minutes should in fact be considered public record once they were compiled.  These minutes, along with other compiled information should have been obtained by the school system before RRMM received final payment for services.
 
In a FOIA obtained email conversation dated June 15, 2011 from School Board member Ann Burruss to Mr. Kiser, the School Board and others starts out with Ms. Burruss providing an update on the WHRO Committee meeting she attended.  Ms. Burruss then writes: “After speaking to Anita today, I feel that I was in error in not “announcing” that I had spoken to Dr. Kiser about serving on this Ad Hoc committee for Page at the same time it was determined that there would be one, which I believe was at the meeting giving the update on Page.  I am reasonably sure that something can get worked out before any final committee membership is determined by Dr. Kiser, as we did foist upon him the task of deciding the make-up of this body.”  School Board member Starr Belvin then wrote: “Does this mean that the board will now have 3 representatives on the committee (you, Anita and Jean)?”  Mr. Kiser then wrote: “Only two board members can serve on this committee.  Ms. Parker and Dr. Pugh were the only ones to express their interest last night.  If the meetings are open to the public, then anyone can be in the audience.  If the Board wishes to give me further guidance on this matter then time can be set aside next week.  Thank you.”  Once three members demonstrated their interest in serving on the committee the committee meetings should have become open to the public or the School Board should have appointed their representatives at a public meeting.  Mr. Kiser’s third sentence demonstrates efforts to conceal the committee meetings from the public.  Concealment of this committee’s deliberations is further evident in the committee’s agenda dated July 18, 2011.  In the first item of the agenda it is written: “Discuss necessity for Confidentiality until recommendations are complete and agreed to by majority.”  Mr. Kiser further demonstrates concealment of the committee’s deliberations in anAugust 04, 2011 email in which he writes to the committee members: “Please consider this information as confidential until it is presented to the School Board.” Mr. Kiser was referring to the results of the committee’s deliberations that were presented to the School Board at the August 9, 2011 regular meeting.  
 
According to the FOIA released emails, Mr. Kiser received 15 emails of interest from teachers, 11 from citizens, 1 from a County Supervisor and 1 from a School Board member. (Attachment ) However, evidence exists that indicates there were restrictions preventing emails sent from the public to the School Board and Mr. Kiser via the Schools Website throughout the recovery process.  
 
Also provided were conversations between Mr. Kiser and Committee member Mike Hagar, beginning on June 30, 2011 with Mr. Hagar saying, “Dr. Kiser, I received your voicemail request for volunteers to serve on a planning board that will address how best to recover from the destruction of Page Middle School.”  Why did Mr. Kiser personally invite and then select this individual to serve on the Committee?  How many other Committee members did Mr. Kiser plant? (Attachment )
 
Also provided was an email conversation in which Mr. Kiser informs School Principles, Tony Beverage, Dave Daniel and Bryan Hartley that he would need them to attend the committee meetings. Committee members Tony Beverage and Bryan Hartley then inform Mr. Kiser that they would only be able to attend the first two meetings.(Attachment )  Mr. Beverage and Mr. Hartley should not have been on the Committee because he could not dedicate the required time and there were other principles who likely could have attended. 
 
Also provided were email conversations between Mr. Kiser and Committee member Jay Napier which begin with Mr. Napier’s request to be on the Committee and reminding Mr. Kiser of them previously playing golf at a Virginia Association of School Superintendents conference and of Mr. Kiser inviting him to the Abingdon Ruritan Club.(Attachment )  For Real??
 
Also provided was an email between Committee member Jennifer Latour and Mr. Kiser in which Ms. Latour informs Mr. Kiser that she would be unable to attend the second of three meetings. Mr. Kiser responds: “The second day will probably be a critical day in the committee’s deliberations but Mr. Daniel speaks highly of your involvement.   I am unsure at this point whether the third day will be needed but maybe we could communicate prior to the 27th in order to get you up to speed.  I have a committee of 17 people and something may prevent any of them from attending on a given day. With that said, I look forward to your participation on the 18th and let’s see what will be needed from that point. Take care.”  Ms. Latour should not have been on the Committee because she could not dedicate the required time and there were other citizens who could.  What involvement was Mr. Kiser referring to?
 
Also provided were conversations between Committee member Russell Fletcher and Mr. Kiser.  Mr. Fletcher first attempted to send his submission to the School Board via the School’s website Email the Superintendent option on the school’s website.  This attempt resulted in the same type email none delivery message I received several months later when attempting to email the School Board through the school’s website.  Mr. Fletcher’s email was not received until he spoke with Administrative Associate, Carol Dehoux and resent his email with the error message to her email address on July 7, 2011.  There is no indication of who initiated the call between Mr. Fletcher and Ms. Dehoux.  Mr. Kiser sent email notifications to the persons who had been selected for the Committee on July 5, 2011 and notified Mr. Fletcher of his selection two days later on July 7, 2011.  This was the same day his email of interest was received by Mr. Kiser.  Why was he added at the last minute when there were other applicants who submitted on time and were not selected?     
 
 
Also provided was an email conversation between Supervisor Buddy Riley and Mr. Kiser which started with Mr. Riley’s request to be on the Committee. (Attachment ) Later in the conversation and after forwarding the email with comments to the Board of Supervisors, Mr. Riley informed Mr. Kiser that he would be representing the Board of Supervisors and that some people were not happy about it.  In a later email conversation Mr. Riley informed Mr. Kiser that he would be unable to attend the 3rd meeting.  Mr. Riley approaching Mr. Kiser about being on the Committee seems inappropriate.  Mr. Riley should not have been on the Committee because he could not dedicate the required time and there were other Board members who could.
 
Also provided was an email conversation between Mr. Kiser and Committee member Kathy Tucker in which Ms. Tucker informs Mr. Kiser that she would only attend the first two meetings. (Attachment )  Ms. Tucker should not have been on the Committee because she could not dedicate the required time and there were other teachers who could.
 
The continual decrease in Gloucester Public Schools student enrollment associated with the nations economic down turn brought about the possibility of having to close a school.  Information received under FOIA demonstrates RRMM Architects was awarded a contract on April 21, 2010 for the purpose of providing possible solutions for the “Repurposing of Page Middle School into a School Administration and Operations Center.(Attachment ) On March 25, 2011 that contract was extended to June 30, 2012.  On April 16, 2011 Page Middle School was damaged by a tornado.(Attachment )  On June 6, 2011 a Purchase Order submitted by RRMM was approved by Gloucester County in the amount of $10,000.00 for “emergency work done to support investigative needs of schools to assess damage”.(Attachment )  On June 6, 2011 another Purchase Order submitted by RRMM was approved by Gloucester County in the amount of $17,000.00 for “emergency work done to support investigative needs of schools to assess damage”.(Attachment )  On June 15, 2011 a Request for Professional Services to “review the potential for reconstructing Page Middle School” was advertised.(Attachment )  On July 7, 2011 another Purchase Order submitted by RRMM was approved by Gloucester County in the amount of $13,545.00 for “schematic design/feasibility study-committee facilitation for Page Middle School options study”.(Attachment )  This work included creating rough cost design and construction estimates for committee proposed facilities.  These rough cost estimates included the costs for land acquisitions, land clearing, storm water management, wetlands mitigation, utility infrastructure extensions, highway and road improvements (including traffic signals), facilitating a Schools Superintendent appointed study-committee and presenting those options and estimated costs to the School Board.  It needs to be noted that every option created by the Committee included signalization of the Route 17 andT.C. Walker Road intersection even if it required purchasing land. (Attachment )  There was no VDOT requirement for a signalized entrance at the old Page school site.  At a School Board meeting on July 12, 2011 Mr. Kiser announced the receipt of eleven proposals in response to the June 15, 2011 Request for Professional Services.  On August 9, 2011 Duane Harver, Principle for RRMM, publicly presented information to the Gloucester School Board pertaining the July 7, 2011 study committee facilitation purchase order.  By this time RRMM’s involvement in the reconstruction professional services process was extensive.  RRMM was awarded the Professional Services contract on January 10, 2012.(Attachment )  RRMM was clearly given an advantage over the other architectural firms who submitted bids in that they were already performing work described in the June 15th RFP before the RFP was advertised and the contract awarded.  Having worked closely with project estimators in the past I contacted several of the bidder’s representatives who spoke freely and expressed the same opinion.  One bidder’s representative suggested their company had considered contesting the contract award, but ultimately decided against it.  
 
Also provided was an email conversation between Mr. Kiser and Mr. Harver in which Mr. Harver expresses concerns about being able to participate in the June 15, 2011 RFP if they commit to facilitating the Committee.(Attachment )  Mr. Harver referenced a previous RFP in which RRMM’s participation was excluded in Chesapeake because of their involvement in a study pertaining to the services requested in the RFP.  Mr. Kiser responded that RRMM’s work with the Committee would not preclude them from bidding and that he and Bill Lindsey, CPPO, CPM for the Gloucester Purchasing Office, had already spoken about it.  How could the other responsive architectural firms possibly have competed against RRMM in this instance?  This is another of numerous tactics utilized by Mr. Kiser to minimize the number of persons involved in the process. 
 
Board of Supervisor meeting minutes show that in 2003 Mr. Breckenridge Ingles submitted a proposal for consideration to the Gloucester Board of Supervisors for development of a high end golf and residential/retirement neighborhood with commercial spaces know as the Barrens.  It is also recorded that local business man and developer Harry Corr had land involved in this proposal. Several months and several hundreds of thousands of dollars later Mr. Ingles’ proposal, though recommended for approval by the Gloucester Planning Commission, was denied by the Board of Supervisors in October 2003.  Issues pertaining to proffers to the County, feedback various Supervisors received from their constituents results of various impact studies to include a County infrastructure impact study led to the Barrens proposal demise.  Immediately before the Board of Supervisors conducted their vote on the proposal Mr. Ingles requested the vote be postponed until after the then upcoming election.  His request was denied.(Attachment ) 
 
Property records reflect that along and across T.C. Walker Road from the new Page Middle School there are 1,854.24 acres of land that was consolidated into Ingles Investments, LLC on September 9, 2008(Attachment ) This is about 97% of the land contained within the circle formed by Routes 17, 628, 629 and 614.  2008-2009 is when the School Board began to discuss repurposing Page Middle School into a School Administration and Operations center.  Mr. Ingles is a partner in local law firm Martin, Ingles and Hensley, Ltd.  Gloucester School Board member Kimberly Hensley’s husband Devin Hensley is also a partner in the same law firm as Mr. Ingles.  
 
Property records reflect that one day prior to the Gloucester School Board publicly voting to rebuild Page Middle School on property it received from the Pella P. Hundley Trust, Harry Corr purchased all 26.79  acres of Route 17 road frontage property that is connected to the Gloucester County property where the new school is being built.(Attachment )  The Gloucester County property and Mr. Corr’s adjoining property also extend along T.C. Walker Road.  Property records indicate Mr. Corr purchased the Route 17 frontage property from the Hundley Trust for $420,000.00.  This was and is more than four times the assessed value.  When the Hundley property was received by Gloucester County in 2004 it appears the 26.79 acres of land that Mr. Corr purchased was divided from the property intended for Gloucester County and placed back into the Hundley Trust.  There is no apparent reason for this land division.  Mr. Corr owns and controls close to 400 acres of land that connects to the old Page Middle School land and connecting Gloucester Public School Transportation Complex.(Attachment )  The extension of the waterline and other utilities to supply the new school, placement of traffic control lights and other improvements to the Route 17, T.C. Walker intersection will financially benefit Mr. Corr who seemed to know prior to the School Board’s vote that Page would be built on the T.C. Walker Road property.
 
There is an existing waterline forming an incomplete loop from the Route 17, Shortlane Road intersection downShortlane Road and partially along T.C. Walker Road.(Attachment )  To complete this waterline infrastructure loop and maximize its supply capability the waterline would need to be extended the rest of the length of T.C. Walker Road and be connected to the main waterline located across Route 17 at the Route 17, T.C. Walker Road intersection.  Upon the School Board’s submission of the Page Middle School site work plans to the Gloucester Building Inspections Office, a requirement from that office to complete the waterline loop was initially made and eventually rescinded due to resistance from the Board of Supervisors and the community.  It was determined that a waterline extended from the opposite side of Route 17 and down T.C. Walker Road to the new school entrance would suffice in supplying the school’s needs and could be connected to at a later date to complete the loop. (Attachment )  Completion of the waterline loop, other utility extensions, traffic control light placement and other improvements of the Route 17,T.C. Walker Road intersection will financially benefit Ingles Investments, LLC.  During a recent joint meeting between the Board of Supervisors and the School Board, non-elected School Board member Kimberly Hensley suggested the Gloucester Public School’s transportation complex, which connects to the old Page Middle School property, be moved to a new Gloucester County Transportation Division/Public School Transportation Division complex that could be built on 22 acres of Gloucester County owned land located off of T.C. Walker Road.  Building the complex proposed by Mrs. Hensley would likely require completion of the waterline loop in order to satisfy fire suppression requirements.  Significant improvements to T.C. Walker Road would likely be required to facilitate the volume and type of traffic generated by this type of facility.
 
 
Mrs. Hensley has voted on matters pertaining to utility extensions and improvements to T.C. Walker Road without revealing a possible conflict of interest by association and she suggested moving the school transportation complex down T.C. Walker Road.
 
Mr. Kiser and the School Board have disregarded input from the community and the Board of Supervisors and have blocked or manipulated the recovery process to minimize their involvement.
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