Review committee tours school
Wednesday, February 26th, 2003
On Monday, the Ad Hoc School Review Committee for Dr. L. B. Powers Public School was given a tour of Beatrice Strong Public School by principal Karen Vandermeer.
Beatrice Strong P.S. is one of the schools were students of L. B. Powers P.S. will be transferred to should the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board choose to close Dr. Powers.
Vandermeer showed the committee around Beatrice Strong P.S., describing the facilities current students enjoy.
“At Beatrice Strong school, we have a junior Y daycare,” she said. “It is a seamless day, with students coming back and forth quite comfortably from school back to day care at the beginning of the morning and at the end of the day. We also have after-school programs that the Y puts on for all the children at the end of the day.”
In the school gymnasium, Vandermeer explained that access to the rest of the school from that area can be restricted.
“If a community group wanted to come in on Saturday, there is no access to the rest of the school,” she said.
The tour participants were shown many of the school’s bright, spacious rooms, accessibility features, the up-to-date kitchen and washroom facilities, and some of the 100 computers that are available for student use.
Vandermeer also took the time to explain what each area was currently used for, and how it could be repurposed should the need to house more students arise.
“We host the Southfield Centre,” she said. “We have a speech pathology, social workers, psychometrists. They are using the centre right at the moment. If we relocate these people (if the Powers students are moved to Beatrice Strong), this will be a special education resource room as well. So I may have up to three new resource rooms.”
“There are very few modifications needed to accommodate (the new students),” said Joe Hubbard at superintendent of administrative services for the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board. “This school is blessed with a lot of storage space because it was built prior to the new (provincial) funding formula. There is one area in here that is currently a storage room that can be turned into a classroom. There is a workshop here that can be turned into a resource room.”
In all, Hubbard said that by repurposing in the existing space, Beatrice Strong Public School could have up to five new classrooms available.
An option being considered to bring portables onto the property could add another two classroom spaces.
The issue of portables raised the question of whether or not closing Dr. Powers P.S. and moving the students to Beatrice Strong P.S. would provide the “equivalent or a better core services” the board is required to provide under the provincial funding formula.
“If we’re going to be objective, we have to list the fact that if the students are going to be housed in portables, that would be a disadvantage,” said Reno Piccini, one of the community representatives on the committee. “I don’t see how students in portables can be considered as having educational opportunities expanded.”
There was also a health issue brought up in regards to portables. Sarah Clayton, and other community representative on the committee, recorded in 1999 report that found over 90% of portables in Peel, Halton and Brant counties had been found to be contaminated with mould.
Hubbard explained that since that report, the mould issue in portables has been addressed.”Since 1999, there have been significant rebuilds and significant further testing (of portables),” Hubbard said. “Those figures might have been true for that specific board at that specific time, but it would not be true for this board at this time.”
Committee chair Erin Brown pointed out that the presence of portables is merely an option at this point.
“One of the options is not to have portables at all,” Brown said.
The Ad Hoc School Review Committee meets again on Tuesday, February 18th at 7:30 p.m. at Dr. L. B. Powers Public School.

