Nice site on the proposed pools and the bond issue.
Here's the reason for the bond issue: "While the State of Wyoming requires that Natrona County Schools operate and maintain a swimming pool to serve the needs of the district’s high school students, it is unwilling to pay for these facilities." In other words, the state requires students have access to a pool (for safety reasons really), but won't pay for them.
If they aren't built, NCHS won't have one, and the district will arguably be immediately out of compliance with the law. That would, quite frankly, seem to invite a law suit, which isn't the district's fault really, but that's what it might do.
Midwest, which tends to be the forgotten high school in the county, has an inadequate pool, would almost certainly seem to be out of compliance with the law without a new one. For some reason, we tend to forget that Midwest even has a high school, let alone a pool, but they have both, and they need a new pool.
Here's something else worth noting:
The original proposal being discussed by the Board of Education has beenWhat this doesn't note is that without the bond issue, at least the NC pool will be gone. It sounds like the younger KW pool is in a terminal state as well. It's usable, but long term it doesn't look good for it. While some people are balking at the cost, it's important to note:
scaled back in scope and now includes the following projects:
- Replacement of NCHS’s 85-year-old
swimming pool with a new 8-lane pool, diving area
and seating- Renovation of
the existing KWHS swimming pool—including new pool equipment, plumbing,
electrical, lighting and pool deck surface—providing 8 lanes, diving area and
additional seating- Design and
construction of a new Midwest Pool with new supporting equipment, plumbing,
electrical (within the existing pool building), new roof and remodeled locker
rooms, restrooms and offices
The scaled-backNote only is it less, but frankly the idea of "one large aquatic center" to serve the needs of the district is absurd. No such central location can conceivably serve the needs of Midwest and we know it won't. Those kids won't be bused across the county for swimming. It'd take up at least half the school day, if the weather is good.
proposal for improving the district’s swimming pools is an estimated $5.8
million LESS than the cost of constructing one large aquatic center to serve
the needs of the entire district.
For that matter, swimming will drop off for both KW and NC students with a central pool. Casper isn't that easy to get around in during the day, as any Casperite knows. Students at NC, if they leave during the day, go west, not east, as that's the easy way for them to go. KW students go east for the same reason. Where could a pool even be built that would be only five or so minutes from both schools? Nowhere.
And consider the actual pools. Here's the proposal for Midwest:
Midwest Pool. A very rational sized pool, that the students there deserve.
And here's the one for NCHS. Again, this is hardly a palatial pool, although it is one that would allow NCHS's swim team to have swimming meets in their pool for the first time in many many years. Indeed, it's worth considering that should an increase in fuel costs ever cause the state to cease funding local busing, and that end up in terminating our county's unique "school of choice" system, about half the KWHS swim team would end up going to NCHS, assuming that, at that time, KW's team has a demographic similar to the existing team, and assuming that at that point in time KW still has a pool, which it very may well not, should the bond issue fail.
The real reason, of course, for the state requirement that the students have access to a pool is that their risk of dieing by drowning is reduced, a very worthwhile goal. And its that average student that the pools serve. These pools would do that job nicely, and the bond for them is well worth supporting.
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