Three Philadelphia schools are expected to reopen this week after asbestos cleanup was completed. Ben Franklin High School and Science Leadership Academy will return to their shared school building in Spring Garden on Tuesday, while James J. Sullivan Elementary will reopen its doors on Wednesday.
Ben Franklin High School and SLA began sharing an extensively renovated building at Broad and Green streets this academic year, but students and staff have been out of the building since October when asbestos was discovered in the boiler room and common areas.
- MORE NEWS
- Philadelphia teachers union wants state of emergency declared as two more schools close due to asbestos
- School District of Philadelphia touts improvement of city’s schools in annual report card
- National teachers’ union calls for additional resources to address asbestos issue in schools
As a result, roughly 1,000 students were forced to attend classes in three different Center City locations: at the former Khepera Charter School building, Rodeph Shalom, and the School District of Philadelphia headquarters.
In addition to the asbestos removal, the school district is now complete $37 million in renovations to the building to create two distinct campuses within the building previously occupied by Ben Franklin High School alone.
The school has new heating and cooling systems, LED lighting, a new cafeteria, and updated learning and common spaces. School District of Philadelphia officials said that more than 120 environmental tests have been conducted over the last two weeks to make sure students and teachers are safe to re-enter the building.
According to FOX29, James J. Sullivan Elementary School will reopen Wednesday after being closed for about a week due to asbestos contamination. The Wissinoming-based school, along with Clara Barton Elementary in Feltonville, closed on Feb. 13 after damaged asbestos insulation was discovered at both during building inspections.
The reopening of three schools comes as the Philadelphia public school district continues to manage asbestos issues at agin buildings across the city. Superintendent Dr. William Hite said to CBS3 on Sunday that the school district does not have unlimited resources to correct the problem.
“We have a lot of old school buildings here in the City of Philadelphia,” Hite said. “In fact, any school that was built prior to 1978 is likely to contain asbestos containing materials and lead paint, and that is 80% of our schools. When you think about that and then you actually add to that years, or decades ... of not doing deferred maintenance and not having the resources or revenue to address capital issues, then you have these things that begin to happen.”
Mayor Jim Kenney gave the superintendent a vote of confidence this past week, as Hite’s contract runs through August 2022.
“I think Dr. Hite’s done a tremendous job,” Kenney said to reporters. “I'm glad he's stayed around as long as he has.”
Follow Pat & PhillyVoice on Twitter: @Pat_Ralph | @thePhillyVoice
Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice
Add Pat's RSS feed to your feed reader
Have a news tip? Let us know.